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Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Zoll Lecture Series Author: Jennifer Giuseffi, MD Series Editor: Eli Gelfand, MD, FACC Harvard Medical School Objectives • Introduction • Symptoms • Causes – Myocardial – Endomyocardial • Diagnosis: – – – – ECG Echocardiography invasive hemodynamics cardiac MRI • Treatment options Harvard Medical School Introduction • Least common type of cardiomyopathy • Increased stiffness of the myocardium impaired diastolic filling • Ventricular volumes are usually normal or reduced • Wall thickness is normal or mildly increased • Systolic function is typically preserved Harvard Medical School Symptoms – similar to HF due to other causes • Volume overload – – – – Fatigue Dyspnea Orthopnea Noctural dyspnea • Arrhythmia palpitations, syncope, exercise intolerance – High-grade AV block (sarcoidosis, amyloid > hemochromatosis) – Atrial tachyarrhythmias, including atrial fibrillation – Ventricular tachyarrhythmia • Reduced cardiac output – Exercise intolerance – Cognitive difficulties Harvard Medical School Etiologies • Myocardial causes, including infiltrative disease, are most common in the US • Endomyocardial causes, specifically endomyocardial fibrosis (EMF) more common outside of US – Leading cause of death in Africa, India, South and Central America, and Asia – Unclear primary cause – Possible association with eosinophilia or nutritional factors Endomyocardial biopsy of a pt with EMF http://www.hefssa.org/images/ahfr_big.jpg Harvard Medical School Myocardial Causes Infiltrative • Amyloidosis – Can be primary, secondary, senile, or familial – Secondary is associated with multiple myeloma • Cardiac sarcoidosis • • – Rarely isolated usually in concert with lymphadenopathy, parenchymal lung disease – Can present with syncope from ventricular tachycardia or block – AV conduction abnormalities typically progressive, so low threshold for pacing +/- ICD Gaucher's Disease Fatty infiltration Harvard Medical School Myocardial Causes Storage Diseases • Hemochromatosis – Therapeutic phlebotomy often reverses cardiomyopathy • Fabry’s Disease – – – – Glycogen Storage Disease Deficiency of alpha-galactosidase A Enzyme replacement is available Testing is free Harvard Medical School Endomyocardial Causes • • • • • • • Endomyocardial Fibrosis Hypereosinophilic syndrome Carcinoid Heart disease Metastatic cancers Radiation Toxic effects of anthracycline Drugs (serotonin, methysergide, ergotamine, mercurial agents, busulfan) Harvard Medical School ECG Findings • • • • Large P waves indicating biatrial enlargement Conduction delays Various ST and T segment changes Ventricular tachycardias – Especially in sarcoidosis • In amyloid, classically – low QRS voltage Harvard Medical School Echocardiographic Findings • Non-dilated, non hypertrophied ventricles – Unless infiltrative or storage disease • Moderate to marked biatrial enlargement • Doppler is required to assess impaired ventricular filling – Diastolic transmitral flow velocity Harvard Medical School Four Chamber and Short-Axis Views Nihoyannopoulos, P. et al. Eur J Echocardiogr 2009 10:iii23-33iii; doi:10.1093/ejechocard/jep156 Amyloid Heart Disease Marked wall thickness (15 mm) concentrically Homogeneous texture of both ventricles Thickening of the mitral and tricuspid leaflets and right ventricle Harvard Medical School M-mode and Parasternal Long-Axis Nihoyannopoulos, P. et al. Eur J Echocardiogr 2009 10:iii23-33iii; doi:10.1093/ejechocard/jep156 Reduced left ventricular function Note the markedly thickened RV free wall Harvard Medical School Doppler Findings • Normal systolic contraction with a rapid but illsustained ventricular filling seen on pulsed-wave Doppler (E-wave) and with little or no late ventricular filling (A-wave). Harvard Medical School Top: mitral annular velocities demonstrating reduced systolic as well as diastolic velocities (E' and a') Bottom: pulsed wave-Doppler from the mitral valve demonstrating very high early diastolic velocity (Ewave), short deceleration time (<130 ms), low late diastolic filling (A-wave) of the transmitral velocity Nihoyannopoulos, P. et al. Eur J Echocardiogr 2009 10:iii23-33iii; doi:10.1093/ejechocard/jep156 Harvard Medical School Cardiac Catheterization Square-root sign (dip and plateau) In diastole, rapid early diastolic filling (dip), followed by a plateau during pressure tracings (seen in both restrictive cardiomyopathy and constrictive pericarditis) From emedicine article Pulmonary Artery Catheterization http://img.medscape.com/pi/emed/ckb/cardiology/150072-160317-3323.jpg • Elevated diastolic pressures – Left ventricular pressures higher than right • Dependent on preload, can have normalization of pressures if adequately diuresed Harvard Medical School Cardiac MRI • High diagnostic accuracy for constrictive pericarditis, which can present similar to restrictive cardiomyopathy – Important to distinguish from restrictive cardiomyopathy as definitive surgical therapy available for constrictive pericarditis • Gold standard for noninvasive diagnosis of cardiac hemochromatosis Harvard Medical School Constriction vs. Restriction Constrictive Pericarditis • Physical Exam: JVP elevated – Kussmal’s sign: lack of the expected inspiratory decline in JVP. Secondary to decreased compliance of the right ventricle – Pericardial Knock • CXR: Calcifications of the pericardium can be present • Echo: Bulging of the septum to the left. Respiration variation in filling velocity (inspiration decreases PCWP decreases pressure gradient for ventricular filling because no effect on ventricular diastolic pressure) • Cath: Equalization of pressures Restrictive Cardiomyopathy • Physical Exam: JVP elevated • EKG: Depolarization abnormalities (such as bundle branch block), ventricular hypertrophy, pathologic Q waves, or impaired AV conduction • Echo: Normal LV function. Minimal variation with respiration of filling velocity (inspiration decreases PCWP and ventricular diastolic pressure equally, no change in pressure gradient) • Cath: Both show dip and plateau Harvard Medical School Treatments • Treat underlying disease in secondary causes • Attempt to maintain sinus rhythm, atrial fibrillation is poorly tolerated – Amiodarone • Treat heart failure symptoms – Diuretics and ACE inhibitors – Avoid digitalis, nifedipine, ACE-I and verapamil in Amyloid • Most are irreversible and require cardiac transplantation, regardless poor prognosis Harvard Medical School Treatment for Cardiac Amyloid http://www.pathology.vcu.edu/education/cardio/lab3.g.html • Usually ineffective and generally consists of supportive measures • Autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation in conjunction with melphalan therapy • Heart transplantation – used only if the patient has isolated cardiac amyloid • ICD placement – controversial given most sudden death is related to electromechanical dissociation not ventricular arrhythmias Harvard Medical School Treatment for Cardiac Sarcoid • Goal is to control inflammation and fibrosis • Glucocorticoids – thought to halt or slow process of inflammation and fibrosis – Dose unclear – Relapses common after taper • Chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, cyclosporine, and methotrexate – can be used for patients that are resistant to steroids • ICD placement – 30-65% of deaths in patient’s with cardiac sarcoid are due to ventricular arrhythmias or conduction block Harvard Medical School Treatment for Other Causes • Hemachromatosis – Treatment with serial phlebotomy • EMF – Poor prognosis with medical therapy (HF therapy beta blockers, diuresis) or prednisone if acute carditis – Endomyocardial resection with valve replacement or repair • Fabry’s – no cure – Treatment with recombinant a-galactosidase A (alphaGal A), likely require dialysis Harvard Medical School Take Home Points • Restrictive cardiomyopathy is uncommon, however mortality is high • Systolic function is typically preserved • Many etiologies including both myocardial and endomyocardial causes • Echo reveals impaired filling • Cardiac cath shows ‘square-root sign’ • MRI can be useful in distinguishing from constrictive pericarditis Harvard Medical School