Med Klin
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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is defined as a primary, sometimes familial and genetically fixed myocardial hypertrophy. In the obstructive form of the disease (HOCM) a dynamic outflow tract obstruction of the left, occasionally also the right ventricle can be found. HOCM is the most frequent cause of stress-induced syncope or sudden cardiac death in younger patients. ⋯ Due to remodeling after circumscribed myocardial necrosis further gradient reduction has been observed during follow-up. Optimization of ablated septal area by echocardiographic monitoring resulted in reduction of the most important complication (trifascicular block with need of permanent pacemaker implantation) and improvement of acute and follow-up results. Long-term follow-up and comparison with established treatment options are necessary to evaluate the definitive importance of the promising new treatment.
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The main feature of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy is the dilation and impaired contractility of the left ventricle or both ventricles. The clinical picture with forward and backward failure is based on the pump impairment of the left ventricle. However, the clinical presentation of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy is indistinguishable from any other secondary form of heart failure. ⋯ According to cardiac catheterization and evaluation of the endomyocardial biopsy idiopathic left ventricular dysfunction can be further stratified using the criterion of a myocardial virus persistence and the presence/absence of inflammatory infiltrates. Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (approximately 70 to 75%), virus-associated dilated cardiomyopathy (approximately 20 to 25%), myocarditis (approximately 7%) and autoimmune myocarditis (approximately 3%) are the 4 possible resulting forms of idiopathic left ventricular dysfunction. Beside conventional medical therapy there are new therapeutic concepts e.g. using interferon for enterovirus-positive patients and immunosuppression for autoimmune, virus-negative patients with a cellular infiltrate.
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The most recent WHO/ISFC classification of cardiomyopathies (1995) describes as cardiomyopathies all heart muscle diseases, which demonstrate a disturbance of cardiac function. It distinguishes primarily according to hemodynamic criteria the following 5 forms: 1. dilated (DCM), 2. hypertrophic (HCM), 3. restrictive (RCM) from 4. arrhythmogenic right ventricular (ARVCM) and assembles in 5. non-classified cardiomyopathies (NKCM) the non-classifiable forms. When compared to the 18-year-old former classification several points have been altered: 1. ⋯ Hypertensive cardiomyopathy corresponds to left ventricular hypertrophy in hypertensive patients, valvular cardiomyopathy identifies cardiomegaly, which cannot sufficiently be explained by the valvular dysfunction (stenoses or insufficiency) alone. For the first time the term inflammatory cardiomyopathy has been used and defined as acute or chronic myocarditis associated with cardiac dysfunction, for which etiological and pathogenetic factors, e.g. viral or microbial infection or autoimmune processes have been made responsible. Two ISFC task forces have just recently clarified in consensus conferences the immunohistopathological criteria for chronic myocarditis or dilated cardiomyopathy with inflammation (DCMi: > 14 lymphocytes or macrophages/mm3) and set standards for molecular and virological diagnoses in endomyocardial biopsies.