Publication | Closed Access
Coxsackievirus Genome in Myocardium of Patients with Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy
42
Citations
22
References
1998
Year
CardiomyopathyHeart FailureEnteroviral RnaInfectionStructural Heart DiseasePathogenesisImmunologyViral PathogenesisPathologyVirologyInfective EndocarditisCoxsackievirus InfectionCoxsackievirus GenomeMedicineCardiologyViral GeneticsInflammatory Heart DiseasesCardiac Pathology
Enteroviruses are known as major infectious agents for inflammatory heart diseases such as myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is characterized by replacement of right ventricular myocardium by fatty and fibrous tissue. In about 65% of patients inflammatory infiltrates suggest an inflammatory or infectious etiopathogenesis. To test this hypothesis, we investigated endomyocardial biopsies of patients with ARVC, with myocarditis or DCM, and from patients with non-inflammatory cardiac disorders for the presence of enteroviral genome. Enteroviral RNA with homology to coxsackieviruses type B was detected in 3 of 8 patients with ARVC (37.5%), in 7 of 23 patients with myocarditis or DCM (30.4%), but in none of 5 patient with non-infectious myocardial diseases (p < 0.05 compared to ARVC patients). These results support earlier suggestions that coxsackievirus infection of the myocardium is possibly related to the pathogenesis of ARVC.
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