• Clinics · Jan 2011

    The characteristics of stress cardiomyopathy in an ethnically heterogeneous population.

    • Francisco O Nascimento, Orlando Santana, Margarita Perez-Caminero, and Alexandre M Benjo.
    • Division of Cardiology at Mount Sinai Heart Institute, Columbia University, Miami Beach, Florida, USA.
    • Clinics (Sao Paulo). 2011 Jan 1; 66 (11): 189518991895-9.

    ObjectivesStress cardiomyopathy is a cardiac syndrome that is characterized by transient left ventricular systolic dysfunction in the absence of obstructive coronary artery disease. Its epidemiology has been described in homogeneous Asian, Caucasian and Black populations, but its characteristics in heterogeneous populations are poorly understood. Our aim was to assess the characteristics of stress cardiomyopathy in a heterogeneous population that included a large percentage of Hispanics.MethodsWe reviewed 59 consecutive cases of stress cardiomyopathy that were confirmed by coronary angiography and were in agreement with the Mayo Clinic diagnostic criteria.ResultsThe mean age of the patients was 74 years (range, 39-91 years), and 37 patients were female (62.7%). Twenty-nine patients (49.2%) were Latino/Hispanic, 26 (44%) were Caucasian, 3 (5%) were Asian, and 1 patient (1.7%) was Black. The most common chief symptom was dyspnea, followed by chest pain and an absence of symptoms in 54.2, 28.8, and 18.6% of the patients, respectively. The primary EKG abnormalities consisted of a T wave inversion, an ST segment elevation, and ST segment depression in 69.5%, 25.4%, and 15.3% of the patients, respectively. The stressor event was identified in 90% of the cases. In 32 cases (54%), the stressor event was physical stress or a medical illness, and in 21 cases (35.6%), the stressor event was emotional stress. The in-hospital mortality rate was 8.5%.ConclusionsIn our heterogeneous study population, stress cardiomyopathy presented with a 3:2 female-to-male ratio, and dyspnea was the most common chief complaint. Stress cardiomyopathy exhibited a T wave inversion as the primary EKG abnormality. These findings differ from previous cases that have been reported, and further studies are needed.

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