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Pathology of the Heart Contents - Structure: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Congenital Heart Disease Endocarditis/Nonbacterial vegetations Valvular Heart Disease Cardiomyopathies Myocarditis 1. Congenital Heart Disease Congenital Heart Disease CHD is a general term used to describe abnormalities of the heart or great vessels that are present from birth. Most CHD arise from faulty embryogenesis during gestational weeks 3 through 8, when major cardiovascular structures develop. The most severe anomalies may be incompatible with intrauterine survival; however, most others are associated with live births. Some may produce menifestations soon after birth; others, however, do not necessarily become evident until adulthood. Most forms are now amenable to surgical repair with good results. The population of adults with CHD is increasing rapidly. In this population CHDs represent an increased risk of endocarditis, thrombotic lesions and arrhythmias. Congenital Heart Disease CHD is the most common type of heart disease among children. The incidence is 6 to 8 per 1000 full-term liveborn. The incidence is higher in premature infants. Congenital Heart Disease CHD fall primarily into 3 major catagories: 1) Malformations causing a left-to-right shunt 2) Malformations causing a right-to-left shunt 3) Malformations causing an obstruction A shunt is an abnormal communication between chambers or blood vessels. Abnormal channels permit the flow of blood from right to left or the reverse, depending on pressure relationships. When blood from the left side of the heart enters the right side (left-to-right shunt), pulmonary blood flow increases, which can result in pulmonary hypertension followed by right ventricular hypertrophy and potentially failure. During the pulmonary hypertension, the muscular pulmonary arteries first respond to increased pressure by medial hypertrophy and vasoconstriction helping to prevent pulmonary edema. Prolonged pulmonary arterial vasoconstriction stimulates the development of irreversible obstructive intimal lesions. The defects accompanied by left-to-right shunt are not initially associated with cyanosis (dusky blueness of the skin and mucous membranes). Congenital Heart Disease Eventuaally, pulmonary vascular resistance and pressures increases toward systemic levels, thereby reversing the shunt to right-to-left with unoxygenated blood develops (late cyanotic CHD or Eisenmenger syndome). Once significant irreversible pulmonary hypertension appears, the structural defects of CHD are considered irreparable. In contrast, right-to-left shunt results in cyanosis, because there is diminished pulmonary blood flow and poorly oxygenated blood enters the systemic circulation (called cyanotic CHD). Moreover, with this shunt, bland or septic emboles arising in peripheral veins can bypass the normal pulmonary flow and thus directly enter the systemic circulation (paradoxical embolism). Clinical findings frequently associated with severe, long-standing cyanosis include clubbing of the tips of the fingers and toes (hypertrophic osteoarthropathy) and polycytemia. Some developmental anomalies of the heart produce obstuctions to flow because of abnormal narrowings of chambers, valves, or blood vessels. Examples are valvulare stenoses (partial obstructions) or atresias (complete occlusions). These anomalies are called obstructive congenital heart disease Congenital Heart Disease LEFT-TO-RIGHT SHUNTS - LATE CYANOSIS A) Atrial Septal Defect (ASD) ASD is an abnormal opening in the atrial septum that allows communication of blood between the left and right atria. ASD is usually asymptomatic until adulthood. The 3 major types are classified according to their location in the septum: Secundum ASD – oval fossa near the mid-septum, accounting for approximatelly 90% of all ASDs, primum ASD – occurs adjacent to the AV valves (5% of ASDs), sinus venosus ASD – located near the entrance of the superior vena cava. Congenital Heart Disease LEFT-TO-RIGHT SHUNTS - LATE CYANOSIS B) Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD) VSD allows free communication between right and left ventricles. VSD is the most common congenital cardiac anomaly. About 70% of VSD are associated with other structural defects such as tetralogy, about 30% occur as isolated anomalies. Depending on the size of the defect, it may produce difficulties virtually from birth or, with smaller lesions, may not be recognized until later or may even spontanely close. VSDs are classified according to size and location. About 90% involve the region of the membranous septum (membranous VSD). The remainder lie below the pulmonary valve (infundibular VSD) or within the muscular septum (muscular VSD). Although most often single, VSDs in the muscular septum may be multiple (so-called Swiss-cheese septum). Congenital Heart Disease LEFT-TO-RIGHT SHUNTS - LATE CYANOSIS C) Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA) PDA is a persistence after birth of the normal communication between the pulmonary arterial system and the aorta of the fetus. About 90% of PDAs occurs as an isolated anomaly. The remainder are most often associated with VSD, coarctation, or pulmonary or aortic stenosis. Congenital Heart Disease LEFT-TO-RIGHT SHUNTS - LATE CYANOSIS D) Atrioventricular Septal Defect (AVSD) AVSDs result from abnormal development of the embryonic AV canal, resulting in incomplete closure of the AV septum and inadequate formation of the tricuspid and mitral valves. The most common forms are partial AVSD – consisting of a primum ASD and cleft anterior mitral leaflet causing mitral insufficiency, and complete AVSD – consisting of a large combined AVSD and a large common AV valve Congenital Heart Disease RIGHT-TO-LEFT SHUNTS - EARLY CYANOSIS A) Tetralogy of Fallot The 4 features of the Fallot tetralogy are: 1. Ventricular septal defect, 2. Obstruction to the right ventricular outflow tract (subpulmonary stenosis), 3. An aorta that overrides the VSD, and 4. Right ventricular hypertrophy. Digital clubbing with cyanotic nail beds in an adult with tetralogy of Fallot RIGHT-TO-LEFT SHUNTS - EARLY CYANOSIS B) Transposition of Great Arteries TGA implies ventriculoarterial discordance, such that the aorta arises from the right ventricle, and the pulmonary artery emanates from the left ventricle. Without surgery, most patients die within the first months of life. Currently, most patients undergo a reparative operation during the first several weeks of life. Congenital Heart Disease RIGHT-TO-LEFT SHUNTS - EARLY CYANOSIS C) Persistent Truncus Arteriosus PTA arises from a developmental failure of separation of the embryonic truncus arteriosus into aorta and pulmonary artery. Congenital Heart Disease RIGHT-TO-LEFT SHUNTS - EARLY CYANOSIS D) Tricuspid Atresia TA is complete occlusion of the tricuspid valve orifice. The lesion is almost always associated with underdevelopment (hypoplasia) of the right ventricle. Cyanosis is present virtually from birth, and there is a high mortality in the first weeks or months of life. Congenital Heart Disease RIGHT-TO-LEFT SHUNTS - EARLY CYANOSIS E) Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Connection No pulmonary veins directly join the left atrium, only primitive systemic venous channels from the lungs to the left innominate vein or to the coronary sinus. Either a patent foramen ovale or an atrioventricular septal defect is always present, allowing pulmonary venous blood to enter the left atrium. Consequences of TAPVC include volume and pressure hypertrophy and dilatation of the right atrium and right ventricle. The left atrium is hypoplastic, but the left ventricle is usually normal in size. Cyanosis may be present, owing to mixing of well-oxygenated and poorly oxygenated blood. Congenital Heart Disease OBSTRUCTIVE CONGENITAL ANOMALIES A) Coarctation of Aorta CA (narrowing, constriction of the aorta) ranks high in frequency among the common structural anomalies. Males affected twice as often as females. Two classic forms have been described: 1. An infantile – with tubular hypoplasia of the aortic arch proximal to a patent ductus arteriosus (it is often symptomatic in early childhood), 2. An adult – with a discrete ridgelike infolding of the aorta. Clinical manifestation depend almost on the severity of the narrowing and the patency of the ductus arteriosus. Most of the children are asymptomatic, and the disease may go unrecognized into adult life. Typically, there is hypertension in the upper extremities, but there are weak pulses and lower blood pressure in the lower extremities, associated with manifestations of arterial insufficiency (i.e., claudication and coldness). Particularly characteristic in adults is the development of collateral circulation between the precoarctation arterial branches and the postcoarctation arteries and the radiographically visible erosions of the ribs. Congenital Heart Disease OBSTRUCTIVE CONGENITAL ANOMALIES B) Pulmonary Stenosis and Atresia PSA is a relatively frequent malformation. PSA constitutes an obstruction at the pulmonary valve, which may be mild to severe. It may occur as an isolated defetc or as part of a more complex anomaly – tetralogy of Fallot or transposition of great arteries. Right ventricular hypertrophy often develops. Mild stenosis may be asymptomatic and compatible with long life, the most severe stenosis is the cyanotic. Congenital Heart Disease OBSTRUCTIVE CONGENITAL ANOMALIES C) Aortic Stenosis and Atresia ASA constitutes the narrowings and obstructions of the aortic valve present from birth. There are 3 major types of stenosis: 1. Valvular – the cusps may be hypoplastic, dysplastic or abnormal in number, less severe degrees of this stenosis may be compatible with long life. In severe forms, obstruction of the left ventricular outflow tract leads to hypoplasia of the left ventricle and ascending aorta = hypoplastic left heart syndrome (is nearly always fatal in the first week of life). 2. Subvalular – represents either a thickened ring (discrete type) or collar (tunnel type) of dense endocardial fibrous tissue below the level of the cusps. 3. Supravalvular – represents an inherited form of aortic dysplasia in which the ascending aortic wall is greatly thickened, causing luminal constriction. Recent studies suggest that mutation in the elastin gene can cause supravalvular aortic stenosis. A prominent systolic murmur is usually detectable. Pressure hypertrophy of the left ventricle develops as a consequence of the obstruction to blood flow. 2. Endocarditis/Nonbacterial vegetations Infective Endocarditis • 100% fatal if undiagnosed and untreated • 20% fatal if diagnosed and treated • uncommon • primarily in adults • commonly with underlying heart disease Gross pathology of subacute bacterial endocarditis involving mitral valve. Left ventricle of heart has been opened to show mitral valve fibrin vegetations due to infection with Haemophilus parainfluenzae. Autopsy. Infective Endocarditis • 70% streptococcal • 20% staphylococcal • Mitral > Aortic > Right • The bigger the vegetation, the more likely it is infected. Infective Endocarditis Symptoms Fever Chills Weakness Dyspnea (80%) (40%) (40%) (40%) Infective Endocarditis Signs Fever (90%) Heart Murmur (85%) Splenomegaly (30%) Petechiae (30%) Infective Endocarditis Uncommon (1/1000 hospital admissions) Primarily a disease of adults (median age 50) Male predominance (male : female ratio 1.7 : 1) 100% fatal if undiagnosed and untreated 20% fatal if diagnosed and treated appropriately (IV antibiotics =/- surgery) Infective Endocarditis Most commonly of the valves, with “vegetations” = friable masses of infecting organisms and blood clot Pathogenesis: 1. Valvular endothelial injury 2. Platelet + fibrin deposition 3. Microbial seeding 4. Microbial multiplication Up to 1010 bugs/gm (mature) Infective Endocarditis: 3 classifications 1. Acute Bacterial Endocarditis (“ABE”) usually fulminant, due to highly virulent organisms (e.g. Staphylococcus aureus) versus Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis (“SBE”) with insidious onset over weeks, due to less virulent organisms (e.g. viridans streptococci) Infective Endocarditis: 3 classifications 2. Native Valve Endocarditis (“NVE”) versus Prosthetic Valve Endocarditis (“PVE”) [commonly due to coagulase-negative Staphylococcus epidermidis, rare in NVE] versus Endocarditis in Intravenous Drug Users [commonly acute and commonly tricuspid] Infective Endocarditis: 3 classifications 3. According to the specific infecting organism: (e.g. Pseudomonas aeruginosa endocarditis) Infective Endocarditis 70% have predisposing heart disease Mitral valve prolapse Congenital disease Prosthetic valve Degenerative disease Rheumatic disease Previous endocarditis Infective Endocarditis Left-sided valves Right-sided valves Both Other 75% 15% 5% 5% Infective Endocarditis Mitral valve alone Aortic valve alone Mitral plus aortic Tricuspid Pulmonic 35% 20% 20% 14% 1% Infective Endocarditis Portals of Entry Gingivitis, Chewing, Brushing teeth, Central venous catheterization, Surgery, Bladder catheterization, Endoscopy, Shaving, Intravenous drug abuse, Ellis Island, etc. Infective Endocarditis: Etiologic Agents I. Streptococci in general 70% A. viridans group streptococci (oral flora) 35% B. Streptococcus bovis 15% (associated with colon cancer) C. Enterococci 10% (enteric flora) D. Other streptococci 10% Infective Endocarditis: Etiologic Agents II. Staphylococci in general A. S. aureus = coagulase-positive 20% 18% III. HACEK group bacteria 4% (fastidious slow-growing oral flora) IV. Other gram-negative aerobes 3% V. Fungi (Candida = most common) 2% Infective Endocarditis Gross Pathology Large (up to 3 cm), friable, tan grey red or brown vegetations, single or multiple, usually on line of valve closure (atrial side atrioventricular valves, ventricular side semilunar valves) Infective Endocarditis Gross Pathology + / - perforation of valve + / - adjacent abscess + / - fibrotic scarring + / - calcification Infective Endocarditis Microscopic Pathology Fibrin, platelets, masses of organisms, +/- necrosis, +/- neutrophils Later: +/-lymphocytes, +/- macrophages, +/- fibroblasts, +/- fibrosis Infective Endocarditis Continuous low-grade bacteremia is characteristic of endocarditis. You don’t need a lot of blood cultures to make the diagnosis, but you should alert the microbiology laboratory that endocarditis is suspected. Endocardial Disease D. INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS IE is one of the most serious of all infections. IE is characterized by colonization or invasion of the heart valves, the mural endocardium, or other cardio-vascular sites by a microbiologic agents (bacteria, fungi, rickettsiae), leading to the formation of bulky, friable vegetation composed of thrombotic debris and microbes, often associated with destruction of the underlying cardiac tissues. The endocarditis has been classified on clinical grounds into acute and subacute forms, reflecting the range of disease severity, its tempo and the virulence of the infecting microorganisms. Clinical Features: Fever, murmurs, petechiae etc. Morphology: Vegetations, destruction of valves, systemic emboli, sepsis, septic infarcts. Complications: Cardiac (valvular insufficiency or stenosis, cardiac failure, myocardial ring abscess with possible perforation of aorta, suppurative pericarditis), embolic (to the brain, heart, spleen, kidneys etc.), renal (embolic infarction, focal and diffuse glomerulonephritis, multiple abscesses). A: Gross photograph of a mitral valve specimen from a patient with Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis; note the vegetations and distortion of the valve. B: A photomicrograph shows the process involving the leaflet and chordae. Pathology of the heart Endocardial Disease E. NONINFECTED VEGETATIONS C.1. Nonbacterial Thrombotic Endocarditis NBTE is characterized by the deposition of small masses of fibrin, platelets, and other blood components on the leaflets of the cardiac valves. In contrast to the vegetations of infective endocarditis, the valvular lesions of NBTE are sterile. NBTE is often encountered in patients with cancer or sepsis – marantic endocarditis. The local effect on the valves is unimportant, clinical significance results from emboli and infarcts of brain, heart etc. producting. In pathogenesis, a hypercoagulable state with systemic activation of blood coagulation such as disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) may be involved. C.2. Endocarditis of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (Libman-Sachs Endocarditis) Mitral and tricuspid valvulitis with small, sterile vegetations. The small pink vegetation on the rightmost cusp margin represents the typical finding with non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis (or so-called "marantic endocarditis"). This is noninfective. It tends to occur in persons with a hypercoagulable state (Trousseau's syndrome, a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with malignancies) and in very ill persons. The valve is seen on the left, and a bland vegetation is seen on the right. It appears pink because it is composed of fibrin and platelets. It displays about as much morphologic variation as a brown paper bag. Such bland vegetations are typical of the non-infective forms of endocarditis. Here is another marantic vegetation on the leftmost cusp. These vegetations are rarely over 0.5 cm in size. However, they are very prone to embolize. Libman-Sacks endocarditis (and mitral rheumatic valvulitis) Here are flat, pale tan, spreading vegetations over the mitral valve surface and even on the chordae tendineae. This patient has systemic lupus erythematosus. Thus, these vegetations that can be on any valve or even on endocardial surfaces are consistent with Libman-Sacks endocarditis. These vegetations appear in about 4% of SLE patients and rarely cause problems because they are not large and rarely embolize. Note also the thickened, shortened, and fused chordae tendineae that represent remote rheumatic heart disease. Endocardial Disease F. CARCINOID HEART DISEASE Principally involving the endocardium and valves of the right side of the heart. Cardiac lesions (fibrous intimal thickenings on the inside surfaces of the cardiac chambers and valvular leaflets) involve one half of patients with the carcinoid syndrome. 3. Valvular Heart Disease Pathology of the heart Endocardial Disease Valvular involvement by disease causes stenosis, insufficiency (regurgitation), or both. Vascular insufficiency may result from either intrinsic disease of valve cusps or damage to or distortion of the supporting structures (aorta, mitral annulus, papillary muscles...). It may appear acutely with infective endocarditis or chronically with scarring and retraction. In contrast, valvular stenosis almost always is due to a primary cuspal abnormality and is virtually always a chronic process. Pathology of the heart Endocardial Disease The most frequent chronic causes of the major functional valvular lesions are as follows: mitral stenosis – rheumatic heart disease, mitral insufficiency – myxomatous degeneration, aortic stenosis - calcification of aortic valves, aortic insufficiency – dilatation of the ascending aorta. Pathology of the heart Endocardial Disease A. VALVULAR DEGENERATION CAUSED BY CALCIFICATION Calcific aortic stenosis (acquired, senile), calcification of a congenitally bicuspid aortic valve, mitral annular calification. B. MYXOMATOUS DEGENERATION OF THE MITRAL VALVE (M. V. PROLAPSE) Complication - infective endocarditis, mitral insufficiency requiring surgery, stroke or other systemic infarct resulting from embolism of leaflet or atrial wall thrombi, and/or arrhythmias. C. RHEUMATIC FEVER AND RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE RF is an acute, immunologically mediated (hypersensitivity reaction), multisystem inflammatory disease that occurs a few weeks after an episode of group A (beta-hemolytic) streptococcal infection and often involves the heart. Acute rheumatic carditis, which complicates the active phase of rheumatic fever, may progress to chronic valvular deformities. RF is characterized by a constellation of findings that includes as major manifestations (1) migratory polyarthritis of the large joints, (2) carditis, (3) subcutaneous nodules, (4) erythema marginatum of the skin, and (5) Sydenham chorea - a neurologic disorder with involuntary purposeless, rapid movements. The most important consequence of RF is chronic rheumatic heart disease, characterized by deforming fibrotic valvular disease (particularly mitral stenosis), which can produce permanent dysfunction and severe, sometimes fatal, cardiac dysfunctions decades later. Morphology: Aschoff bodies (nodules) – foci of fibrinoid degeneration surrounded by lymphocytes and histiocytes (multinucleated form of histiocytes is called Aschoff giant cells). Concomitant involvement of the endocardium and the left-sided valves (fibrinoid necrosis with formation of verrucalike vegetations) may cause a rare emboli and valve deformations. Subendocardial lesions may induce irregular thickenings in the left atrium called MacCallum plagues. Nikolai Nikolajewitsch Anitschkow Russian pathologist, born November 3, 1885; died December 7, 1964 The small verrucous vegetations seen along the closure line of this mitral valve are associated with acute rheumatic fever. These warty vegetations average only a few millimeters and form along the line of valve closure over areas of endocardial inflammation. Such verrucae are too small to cause serious cardiac problems. The heart has been sectioned to reveal the mitral valve as seen from above in the left atrium. The mitral valve demonstrates the typical "fish mouth" shape with chronic rheumatic scarring. Mitral valve is most often affected with rheumatic heart disease, followed by mitral and aortic together, then aortic alone, then mitral, aortic, and tricuspid together. 4. Cardiomyopathies Cardiomyopathies “A primary disorder of the heart muscle that causes abnormal myocardial performance and is not the result of disease or dysfunction of other cardiac structures … myocardial infarction, systemic hypertension, valvular stenosis or regurgitation” Classification etiology gross anatomy histology genetics biochemistry immunology hemodynamics functional prognosis treatment WHO Classification Unknown cause (primary) Dilated Hypertrophic Restrictive unclassified Specific heart muscle disease (secondary) Infective Metabolic Systemic disease Heredofamilial Sensitivity Toxic Br Heart J 1980; 44:672-673 Functional Classification Dilatated (congestive, DCM, IDC) Hypertrophic (IHSS, HCM, HOCM) ventricular enlargement and syst dysfunction inappropriate myocardial hypertrophy in the absence of HTN or aortic stenosis Restrictive (infiltrative) abnormal filling and diastolic function Graphic representation of the three distinctive and predominant clinical-pathologic-functional forms of myocardial disease. Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy a disease of unknown etiology that principally affects the myocardium LV dilatation and systolic dysfunction pathology increased heart size and weight ventricular dilatation, normal wall thickness heart dysfunction out of portion to fibrosis Incidence and Prognosis 3-10 cases per 100,000 20,000 new cases per year in the U.S.A. death from progressive pump failure 1-year 2-year 5-year 25% 35-40% 40-80% stabilization observed in 20-50% of patient complete recovery is rare Clinical Manifestations Highest incidence in middle age blacks 2x more frequent than whites men 3x more frequent than women symptoms may be gradual in onset acute presentation misdiagnosed as viral URI in young adults uncommon to find specific myocardial disease on endomyocardial biopsy Dilated cardiomyopathy. A, Gross photograph. Four-chamber dilatation and hypertrophy are evident. There is granular mural thrombus at the apex of the left ventricle (on the right in this apical four-chamber view). The coronary arteries were unobstructed. B, Histology demonstrating variable myocyte hypertrophy and interstitial fibrosis (collagen is highlighted as blue in this Masson trichrome stain). Biopsy findings consistent with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. A: Marked myocyte hypertrophy. B: Irregular hypertrophy. C: Focal, particularly subendocardial replacement and interstitial fibrosis. Severe Adriamycin effect is seen in this 1-mm thick section (A) stained with toluidine blue. The electron micrograph (B) shows sarcotubular dilation, one of the earlier changes. Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy First described by the French and Germans around 1900 uncommon with occurrence of 0.02 to 0.2% a hypertrophied and non-dilated left ventricle in the absence of another disease small LV cavity, asymmetrical septal hypertrophy (ASH), systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve leaflet (SAM) 65% 35% 10% www.kanter.com/hcm Familial HCM First reported by Seidman et al in 1989 occurs as autosomal dominant in 50% 5 different genes on at least 4 chromosome with over 3 dozen mutations chromosome chromosome chromosome chromosome 14 (myosin) 1 (troponin T) 15 (tropomyosin) 11 (?) Pathophysiology Systole Diastole dynamic outflow tract gradient impaired diastolic filling, filling pressure Myocardial ischemia muscle mass, filling pressure, O2 demand vasodilator reserve, capillary density abnormal intramural coronary arteries systolic compression of arteries Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. High-power photomicrograph of marked myocyte hypertrophy and disarray from a septal region Restrictive Cardiomyopathy Hallmark: abnormal diastolic function rigid ventricular wall with impaired ventricular filling bear some functional resemblance to constrictive pericarditis importance lies in its differentiation from operable constrictive pericarditis Classification Idiopathic Myocardial 1. Noninfiltrative Idiopathic Scleroderma 2. Infiltrative Amyloid Sarcoid Gaucher disease Hurler disease 3. Storage Disease Hemochromatosis Fabry disease Glycogen storage Endomyocardial endomyocardial fibrosis Hyperesinophilic synd Carcinoid metastatic malignancies radiation, anthracycline Restriction vs Constriction History provide can important clues Constrictive pericarditis Restrictive cardiomyopathy history of TB, trauma, pericarditis, sollagen vascular disorders amyloidosis, hemochromatosis Mixed mediastinal radiation, cardiac surgery Secondary KMP (specific diseases of myocardium) - Despite different etiology morphology of dilated cardiomyopathy Metabolic disorders - hemochromatosis, calcinosis, amyloidosis, glykogenosis Endocrine disorders - hyperthyreosis, hypothyreosis, acromegaly, pheochromocytoma - Duchenn muscular dystrophy - some drugs (cytostatics adriamycin, cyclophosphamide) - accumulation of small lipid droplets of neutral fat in the cytoplasm, Muscle dystrophies Intoxication Steatosis Amyloidosis involving the myocardium. The marked atrophy of the myocytes caused by the interstitial infiltrate can be appreciated in longitudinal (A) and transverse (B) sections of the myocardium. C: Ultrastructural studies confirm the nature of the interstitial infiltrate. D: Involvement may be quite focal and microscopic. Cardiac storage diseases with intracellular depositions. A: Extensive iron deposits are seen (Pearl iron stain). B: Vacuolated myocytes in an endomyocardial biopsy specimen obtained from a female patient heterozygous for Fabry disease. C: Typical lamellar intracellular inclusions are seen ultrastructurally. ADRV Arrythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. A, Gross photograph, showing dilation of the right ventricle and near transmural replacement of the right ventricular free-wall myocardium by fat and fibrosis. The left ventricle has a virtually normal configuration. B, Histologic section of the right ventricular free wall, demonstrating replacement of myocardium (red) by fibrosis (blue, arrow) and fat (collagen is blue in this Masson trichrome stain). 5. Myocarditis Myocarditis Inflammatory disease of myocardium with necrosis and/or degeneration of muscle cells (Dallas criteria) Isolated Connected to inflammation elsewhere in body Quite rare, mainly affecting children and young adults Morphology cellular infiltrate Necrosis of adjacent muscle fibers Mostly healing without consequences, sometimes progression , heart failure, death. Myocarditis and cardiomyopathies infectious viral Most often - Coxsackie B, A, ECHO, influensa, CMV, HIV,.. Upper respiratory tract infection precedes Diagnostics serology … titer Ab Molecular biology PCR of viral DNA/RNA Isolation of viral agent BUT : in the time of diagnosis the agent not present in tissue Pathogenesis Direct destruction of cells by virus ( cytopathic effect), indirectly by T-cell immune reaction (in Coxsackie this type of destruction more often) in lateg stage autoimmune reaction Myocarditis Most often changes hypereosinophilia, serous exudate, scattered inflammatory cells. Later destruction of muscle cells, T cells, histiocytes Final stage intersticial fibrosis with compensatory hypertrophy of heart This series of photomicrographs illustrates different forms of myocarditis. A: Severe diffuse myocarditis. B: Diffuse myocarditis with fibrosis. C: Focal myocarditis. D: Diffuse myocarditis with a prominent eosinophilic infiltrate. Myocarditis. A, Lymphocytic myocarditis, with mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltrate and associated myocyte injury. B, Hypersensitivity myocarditis, characterized by interstitial inflammatory infiltrate composed largely of eosinophils and mononuclear inflammatory cells, predominantly localized to perivascular and large interstitial spaces. This form of myocarditis is associated with drug hypersensitivity. C, Giant cell myocarditis, with mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate containing lymphocytes and macrophages, extensive loss of muscle, and multinucleated giant cells. D, The myocarditis of Chagas disease. A myofiber is distended with trypanosomes (arrow). There is a surrounding inflammatory reaction and individual myofiber necrosis. Myocarditis bacterial Following septicopyemy - most often staphylococci – endocarditis, embol.abscesses in myocardium - exotoxin Corynebacterium diphteriae - in Lyme disease -Borrelia burgdorferi – Infektotoxic (diphteria type) exotoxin interferes with carnitin transport of fatty acids and destruction of proteosynthesis on ribosomes Patchy necrosis of cardiomypcytes, eosinophilia, steatosis Serous inflammation, lymphoplasmocellular inflammation Mainly right ventricle affected Infektoallergic 3 weeks after infection, type IV hypersensitivity, right ventricle Mycotic mainly Candida – immunocompromised patients Parasitic toxoplasmosis - Toxoplasma gondii (AIDS) Chagas disases - Trypanosoma cruzi (South America) Early patchy necrosis of myocardium, lymphocytes, macrophages, pseudocystes in muscle fibres, left ventricle dilation. Myocarditis caused by intracellular parasites. A: Multifocal myocarditis caused by Trypanosoma cruzi (Chagas disease) is seen on low power. B: High power shows the intracellular organisms inside a myocyte, which is often not associated with an adjacent inflammatory reaction. C: Toxoplasma gondii infection in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A: A fibrinous interstitial infiltrate is seen in Pneumocystis carinii infection. B: Silver stain demonstrates the offending organisms (Grocott methenamine silver stain). Non-infectious Drug hypersensitivity • Antibiotics, antiflogistics, antiepileptics • Eosinophil myocarditis Granulomatous Granulomas of sarcoid type, left ventricle and septum involved Acute idiopatic giant cell myocarditis Fiedler Young men around 20 years of age lymphocytic-histiocytic inflammation, multinuclear giant cells or heart muscle origin Sarcoidosis involving the myocardium.