Cardiomyopathies are structural and functional abnormalities of the heart muscle that are not explained by coronary artery disease or abnormal loading. The main types are dilated, hypertrophic, restrictive, and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. Dilated cardiomyopathy is characterized by enlarged heart chambers and poor contraction. Causes include viruses, toxins, inherited factors, and metabolic issues. Treatment focuses on managing heart failure symptoms. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy causes thickened heart muscle and outflow tract obstruction. Restrictive cardiomyopathy results in stiff heart muscles and high filling pressures. Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy replaces the right ventricle with scar tissue.
2. Definition
• Cardiomyopathies are defined by
structural and functional abnormalities of
the ventricular myocardium that are
unexplained by flow-limiting coronary
artery disease or abnormal loading
conditions
European Heart Journal Advance Access published August 29, 2014
(http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/)
2
3. The Cardiomyopathies, as defined
by the World Health Organization
Specific (sec. to external
processes)
Intrinsic to myocardium
Hypertensive cardiomyopathy Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM)
Valvular cardiomyopathy Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)
Ischemic cardiomyopathy Arrhythmogenic right ventricular
dysplasia
(ARVD)
Cardiomyopathy sec. to systemic
disease
Obliterative cardiomyopathy (OCM)
Inflammatory cardiomyopathy
10. DCM : C/F & DIAGNOSIS
• Dyspnoea on exertion
• Orhopnoea
• Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea
• Pulsus alternans
• Chest pain with features of typical angina pectoris
• Manifestations of peripheral embolization
Acute neurologic deficit
Flank pain
Hamaturia
Cyanotic extremity
• F/S/O CHF – bibasal rales, dependent edema, ↑liver size
• ↑JVP (prominent a and v waves – TR)
• Auscultation : - Holosystolic regurgitant murmurs, Gallop
Ref – Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine, 6th Ed
10
11. Contd…
CXR : - Enlarged cardiac silhouette (d/t biventricular enlargement)
-Kerley B lines, enlarged central pulmonary arteries, widened
right heart border ( E/o pulmonary venous HTN)
11
12. Contd…
• ECG : - LV hypertrophy and LA enlargement are the most common
findings
• AF & ventricular ectopy are common rhythm disturbances
• Poor R-wave progression
• Low QRS voltage +/-
• ECHO: - ↓ EF
↑ Systolic & Diastolic volumes
Ventricular & atrial enlargement
Stress test – Tachyarrhythmias
MR/TR on Doppler flow
Ref - www.echopedia.org
12
13. DCM : TREATMENT
• ACE Inhibitors (Enalapril, Ramipril)
• Angiotensin II Receptor Blockers (Valsartan, Losartan)
• ᵝ Blockers (Carvedilol, Metoprolol)
• Nesiritide (recombinant DNA form of human BNP that dilates veins
& arteries)
• Diuretics (Furosemide, Spironolactone)
• Antiarrhythmics
• I/v Nitroglycerin (Preload reduction with venodilators is thought to be
helpful in acute decompensated heart failure by reducing
congestions and minimizing cardiac O2 demand)
• Digoxin (cardiac glycoside with direct inotropic effects increasing
myocardial systolic contractions)
• Anticoagulants (in AF, with artificial valves, and with known mural
thrombus) 13
16. • HCM is characterized by LV and/or RV hypertrophy that
is usually asymmetrical and involves primarily the
interventricular septum
• Genetic basis : caused by a mutation in cardiac
sarcomere protein genes.
16
17. CLINICAL FEATURES:-
• Sudden cardiac death (most devastating presenting
manifestation)
• Dyspnoea on exertion (d/t exercise-induced sinus tachy,
which results in an abrupt ↑ LV diastolic pressure &
pulmonary venous HTN)
• Syncope & pre syncope
• Angina (d/t an imbalance between the O2 demand of the
hypertrophied LV & the available myocardial blood flow)
• Palpitations
• Orthopnoea & PND (early signs of CHF)
• A family h/o death d/t cardiac disease +
17
18. Contd…
• Normal S1; S2 is usually split but is paradoxically split in
some patients with severe outflow gradients; S3 gallop is
common in children but signifies decompensated CHF in
adults; S4 is frequently heard
• Systolic ejection crescendo-decrescendo murmur.
• Holosystolic murmur at the apex and axilla of MR
• Apical precordial impulse that is displaced laterally and
usually is abnormally forceful and enlarged
• Jugular venous pulse revealing a prominent ‘a’ wave
18
19. DIAGNOSIS:-
CXR –
Enlarged cardiac silhouette
ECG –
ST-T wave abnormalities and LVH (common)
Axis deviation (right or left)
Conduction abnormalities (PR ↑, BBB)
ECHO –
LVH
Left atrial enlargement
Small ventricular chamber size
Abnormal systolic anterior leaflet motion of the mitral valve
MVP & MR
Septal hypertrophy with septal-to-free wall ratio greater than 1.4:1
19
20. MANAGEMENT :-
Pharmacologic therapy for HCM may include the following:-
• ᵝ blockers
• CCB
• Diltiazem, Amiodarone (rate control)
• Avoid Digitalis & use diuretics with caution
Surgical & catheter-based therapeutic options include the
following:-
• MVR
• LV Myomectomy
• PPM implantation
• implantable cardioverter defibrillator
• Heart Transplantation 20
21. RESTRICTIVE CARDIOMYOPATHY :-
• defined as heart muscle disease that results in
"restricted" ventricular filling, with normal or decreased
diastolic volume of either or both ventricles.
• It is among the least common of the described
Cardiomyopathies. 21
22. CAUSES :-
• It may result from systemic diseases like :-
• Amyloidosis
• Sarcoidosis
• Hemochromatosis
• Progressive systemic sclerosis
• Carcinoid heart disease
• Endomyocardial fibrosis
• Hypereosinophilic syndrome
• Glycogen storage disease of the heart
• Metastatic malignancy
• Idiopathic 22
23. The hemodynamic hallmarks include :-
• i) Elevated LV and RV end-diastolic pressure
• ii) Normal LV systolic function (EF > 50 %)
• iii) marked ↓ followed by a rapid rise & plateau in early-
diastolic ventricular pressure
• The rapid rise and abrupt plateau in the early-diastolic
ventricular pressure trace produce a characteristic
"square-root sign" or "dip-and-plateau" filling pattern d/t ↑
myocardial stiffness
23
24. CLINICAL FEATURES :-
• Gradually worsening shortness of breath
• Progressive exercise intolerance
• Fatigue (d/t ↓ stroke volume and c.o.)
• Orthopnoea & PND
• Chest pain mimicking MI can be observed, primarily in
patients with Amyloidosis (possibly d/t myocardial
compression of small vessels)
• Palpitations (frequently d/t AF)
• Hepatomegaly, R upper quadrant pain, and ascites
(Right-sided manifestations)
24
25. Contd…
• An S3 is almost always present & an S4 is often heard if
the patient is in sinus rhythm
• Pulmonary rales
• Jugular venous distention
• Kussmaul sign (jugular venous pulse ↑ during inspiration
rather than falling)
• Murmurs d/t MR/TR may be heard
• Breath sounds are ↓ d/t pleural effusion (M/c present in
Amyloidosis – B/L & large)
• Hepatomegaly, pedal edema and ascites
25
26. DIAGNOSIS :-
• CXR – atrial dilatation causing ↑ cardio thoracic ratio, normal
ventricular size
• ECG – non specific changes.
AF or conduction abnormalities like AV block or intraventricular
conduction delays +/-
• ECHO - non-hypertrophied, non-dilated ventricle with preserved
systolic function and dilated atria
Doppler: restrictive filling dynamics of the L & of RV
26
29. Contd…
• Rarest of the cardiomyopathies, AD inheritance
• Characterized by progressive replacement of the RV
myocardium with fibrofatty tissue in an eventual global
distribution (LV & septum – usually spared)
• The typical presentation - sudden death/ventricular
dysrhythmia in a young or middle-aged patient
• The findings upon physical examination are normal. The
chest radiograph shows no specific findings, and the
heart size is not enlarged. The ECG may show a right
bundle branch pattern
• ECHO shows RV contraction abnormalities & RV
enlargement
29
30. Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy
• Transient cardiac syndrome that involves left ventricular apical
akinesis and mimics ACS
• Patients often present with chest pain, have ST-segment ↑ on ECG
& ↑ cardiac enzyme levels consistent with MI.
ECG of a patient with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy showing ST-
segment ↑ in anterior and inferior leads.
• Japanese word Takotsubo translates to "octopus pot," resembling
the shape of the LV during systole on imaging studies 30
31. Contd…
• Modified Mayo Clinic criteria for diagnosis of TCM can be
applied to a patient at the time of presentation and must
contain all 4 aspects :-
i) Transient hypokinesis, dyskinesis, or akinesis of the LV mid
segments, with or without apical involvement; the regional wall-
motion abnormalities extend beyond a single epicardial vascular
distribution, & a stressful trigger is often, but not always, present.
ii) Absence of obstructive coronary disease or angiographic evidence of
acute plaque rupture
iii) New ECG abnormalities (either ST-segment ↑ and/or T-wave
inversion) or modest ↑ in cardiac Troponin level
iv) Absence of Pheochromocytoma or Myocarditis 31
32. PERIPARTUM CARDIOMYOPATHY :-
• is defined as the onset of acute heart failure without
demonstrable cause in the last trimester of pregnancy or
within the first 5 months after delivery.
• A form of DCM.
32
33. Criteria for Peripartum Cardiomyopathy :-
1.Development of Cardiac failure in the last month of
pregnancy or within 5 month after delivery
2. Absence of an identifiable cause for the cardiac failure.
3.Absence of recognizable heart disease prior to the last
month of pregnancy.
4.Left ventricular systolic dysfunction demonstrated by
classic Echo Cardio Graphic criteria such as depressed
shortening fraction or ejection fraction.
33
34. Etiology :-
Still unknown
Probable causes :-
• Nutritional deficiencies
• Small vessel coronary artery abnormality
• Hormonal effects
• Toxemia
• Maternal immunologic response to fetal antigen
• Myocarditis
• Maternal age > 30 years
• Twinning
• HTN & eclamptic patients 34
35. Clinical Features :-
New or rapid onset of the following :-
• Cough
• Orthopnoea
• PND
• Palpitations
• Hemoptysis
• Unexplained abdominal pain
O/E :-
• enlarged heart, tachycardia, ↓ pulse oximetry,↑JVP, S3,
Worsening of peripheral oedema, ascites &
hepatomegaly, MR, TR, Pulmonary rales
35
36. Diagnosis :-
Echo remains the mainstay for diagnosis PPCM
• Findings :-
• ↓ in myocardial systolic function, as manifested by a ↓ in
LVEF or fractional shortening is essential to the
diagnosis
• LV dilatation is also frequently evident
• The most common alternative diagnosis is the occult
valvular heart disease which can be effectively ruled out
by transthoracic echocardiography. The finding of normal
systolic function excludes PPCM & should lead to an
evaluation for forms of high output failure such as
anaemia and thyrotoxicosis
36
37. MANAGEMENT :-
Mx of HF
During pregnancy :-
• ACE inhibitors & ARBs are C/I in pregnancy because
these can cause birth defects (fetal hypotension,
pulmonary hypoplasia)
• Digoxin (inotropic & rate ↓ effect), loop diuretics (preload
↓ along with salt restriction), Na+ restriction & Rx that ↓
afterload such as Hydralazine & Nitrates have been
proven to be safe
During post partum period :-
• ACE inhibitors and ARBs are useful
• Diuretics are given for symptomatic relief,
Spironolactone or Digoxin (NYHA III or IV symptoms)
37
38. Newer Treatment Modalities :-
• Pentoxifylline : Xanthine derived agent known to inhibit
the production of TNF α - improves functional class & LV
function in patients with idiopathic DCM
• Immune Modulating Therapy : Plasmapharesis has
also been utilized effectively & may be an alternative to
immune globulin therapy in PPCM
• AICD
• Cardiac transplantation : Patients with severe heart
failure who does not respond despite maximal drug
therapy may be considered for cardiac transplantation
38