Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:45


42 Acute Myocarditides

edema (Kerley B lines, perivascular, subpleural effusion), alveo-
lar edema (“butterfly pattern”)
➣Electrocardiogram: non-specific ST/T wave changes, conduc-
tion abnormalities (especially Chagas’)
➣Echocardiogram (2-D with Doppler flow study): single most use-
ful diagnostic test; cardiac function, structure, wall motion and
valvular abnormalities, assess wall thickness, exclude other dis-
ease
■Other Tests as Appropriate
➣Radionuclide ventriculogram (RVG; MUGA): Cardiac function,
wall motion abnormalities
➣Exercise or pharmacologic stress testing: assess myocardial
ischemia risk
➣Cardiac catheterization: define coronary anatomy
➣Endomyocardial biopsy: insensitive and often non-specific; most
useful for monitoring anthracycline cardiotoxicity and detection
and monitoring of myocarditis, especially Giant cell.
➣Machado-Guerreiro complement-fixation test or ELISA (Chagas’
disease); viral culture from body fluids, viral-neutralizing anti-
body titers, complement fixation, PCR of viral genes from biopsy
samples (viral)

differential diagnosis
■Multiple infectious etiologies: partial listing of most common
pathogens
➣Viral: About 24 viruses associated with myocarditis, including
coxsackieviruses (over 50% of cases), HIV, CMV, viral hepatitis,
poliomyelitis
➣Rickettsial: Rocky Mountain spotted fever, scrub typhus, Q fever
(endocarditis most common)
➣Bacterial: diphtheria (about 25% cases and most common cause
of death with diphtheria), brucellosis, Legionnaires disease,
mycoplasma pneumoniae, streptococcal (see Rheumatic fever)
➣Spirochetal: Lyme carditis (tickborne; 10% with cardiac involve-
ment, usually degrees of heart block; ventricular dysfunction rare)
➣Fungal: most frequent in patients with malignancy and/ or
immunosuppressive therapy; aspergillosis (not uncommon in
generalized infection), mucormycosis (about 20% in patients
with disseminated form; invasion of arteries causes infarction),
candidiasis (endocarditis most common), cryptococcosis (most
common in HIV)
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