Structural and functional cardiac changes in endomyocardial fibrosis treated with endomyocardial resection: Disease progression captured by multimodality imaging.
Gregory T GibsonDavid T MajureAlan HartmanTaisia VitkovskiFrank BreuerSimon MaybaumJeffrey T KuvinShahryar G SabaPublished in: Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.) (2021)
Eosinophilic myocarditis, a rare and under-recognized disease process, occurs due to cytotoxic inflammation of the endomyocardium that over time may lead to a restrictive cardiomyopathy. We report clinical, multimodality imaging, and pathologic findings in a 45-year-old woman over a 17-month period as she progressed from suspected acute eosinophilic myocarditis to phenotypic endomyocardial fibrosis resulting in recurrent ascites. Interval echocardiograms demonstrate definitive pathologic structural changes that reflect the hemodynamic consequences of the underlying cardiomyopathy. Despite a negative myocardial biopsy, characteristic findings on cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging clarified the diagnosis which led to successful treatment with endomyocardial resection and valve replacements.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- heart failure
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- locally advanced
- left ventricular
- oxidative stress
- computed tomography
- liver failure
- mitral valve
- chronic rhinosinusitis
- pulmonary embolism
- radiation therapy
- photodynamic therapy
- hepatitis b virus
- magnetic resonance
- mass spectrometry
- fine needle aspiration
- newly diagnosed
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- atrial fibrillation
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement