Myocardial Calcification: An Unusual Complication of Remote Trauma With Coidentified Amyloidosis.
Zachary Alan WilkinsonAlison R KrywanczykPublished in: Academic forensic pathology (2023)
We present the heart of a 38-year-old man with paraplegia due to a remote traumatic spinal cord injury. In the 20 years following his injury, he experienced chronic decubitus ulcers, osteomyelitis, neurogenic bladder, malnutrition, and urinary tract infections. He was admitted to the hospital with septic shock secondary to multiple decubitus ulcers and osteomyelitis and expired after a two-month hospitalization. At autopsy, there was marked replacement of left ventricle and interventricular septal myocardium by gritty, firm, yellow-white tissue. Microscopic examination demonstrated a remote infarct with marked dystrophic calcification and unexpected amyloid deposition. This example demonstrates the extraordinary extent to which dystrophic calcifications can replace myocardium and highlights multiple potential etiologies of myocardial calcifications. Of note, this is the first report documenting myocardial calcification as a complication of remote, non-iatrogenic trauma. The role of the amyloidosis in the development of calcification is unclear, but a contributory effect cannot be excluded.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord injury
- chronic kidney disease
- septic shock
- left ventricular
- urinary tract infection
- spinal cord
- neuropathic pain
- heart failure
- healthcare
- multiple myeloma
- mitral valve
- pulmonary hypertension
- pulmonary artery
- coronary artery
- atrial fibrillation
- wound healing
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- climate change