Refers to an inflammatory process leading to acute, subacute or chronic injury of the myocardium
Aetiology
Viral infection is the most common cause of acute myocarditis
Coxsackievirus is the most common viral cause in Europe and the USA; however, most viruses are potential agents, including adenovirus, influenza A and B, HIV, EBV, hep B and C, borrelia burgdoferi (Lyme disease)
Global causes include Chaga’s disease due to trypanosomiasis (South America), and diptheria (most common cause worldwide)
Immune-mediated hypersensitivity reactions can also cause myocarditis
Hypersensitivity to infection - rheumatic fever after strep sore throat
Hypersensitivity to drugs - eosinophilic myocarditis
Systemic autoimmune diseases e.g. SLE
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
Fever
Chest pain
Dyspnoea
Palpitations
Signs
Soft heart sounds, prominant third sound
Tachycardia
Cardiac failure
Investigations
ECG - changes may include ST-segment elevation/depression, T-wave inversion, atrial arrhythmias, transient AV block
Bloods - raised troponin and creatinine kinase, raised inflammatory markers
CXR - enlarged heart and/or signs of heart failure
Viral PCR may be used - throat swab and stool for enteroviruses, throat swab for influenza
Consider autoantibodies to scren for systemic autoimmune diseases
Endomyocardial biopsy is the definative test but very risky so only done if it is thought this will change the management plan
Cardiac MRI can be used to differentiate between acute myocarditis and infarction