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Survival and Left Ventricular Function Changes in Fulminant Versus Nonfulminant Acute Myocarditis

Authors :
Maurizio Bottiroli
Edgardo Bonacina
Rossana Totaro
M.P. Gagliardone
Alberto Roghi
Claudio Russo
Claudia Raineri
Marzia Lilliu
Manlio Cipriani
Fabio Turazza
Maria Frigerio
Andrea Garascia
Paola Sormani
Patrizia Pedrotti
Marisa Varrenti
Enrico Ammirati
Antonella Moreo
Michele Mondino
Duccio Petrella
Paolo G. Camici
Stefano Ghio
Fabrizio Oliva
Ammirati, Enrico
Cipriani, Manlio
Lilliu, Marzia
Sormani, Paola
Varrenti, Marisa
Raineri, Claudia
Petrella, Duccio
Garascia, Andrea
Pedrotti, Patrizia
Roghi, Alberto
Bonacina, Edgardo
Moreo, Antonella
Bottiroli, Maurizio
Gagliardone, Maria P.
Mondino, Michele
Ghio, Stefano
Totaro, Rossana
Turazza, Fabio M.
Russo, Claudio F.
Oliva, Fabrizio
Camici, Paolo
Frigerio, Maria
Ammirati, E
Cipriani, M
Lilliu, M
Sormani, P
Varrenti, M
Raineri, C
Petrella, D
Garascia, A
Pedrotti, P
Roghi, A
Bonacina, E
Moreo, A
Bottiroli, M
Gagliardone, M
Mondino, M
Ghio, S
Totaro, R
Turazza, F
Russo, C
Oliva, F
Camici, P
Frigerio, M
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Previous reports have suggested that despite their dramatic presentation, patients with fulminant myocarditis (FM) might have better outcome than those with acute nonfulminant myocarditis (NFM). In this retrospective study, we report outcome and changes in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) in a large cohort of patients with FM compared with patients with NFM. Methods: The study population consists of 187 consecutive patients admitted between May 2001 and November 2016 with a diagnosis of acute myocarditis (onset of symptoms Results: In the whole population (n=187), the rate of in-hospital death or heart transplantation was 25.5% versus 0% in FM versus NFM, respectively ( P P P P =0.003). Similar results for survival and changes in LVEF in FM versus NFM were observed in the subgroup (n=130) with viral myocarditis. None of the patients with NFM and LVEF ≥55% at discharge had a significant decrease in LVEF at follow-up. Conclusions: Patients with FM have an increased mortality and need for heart transplantation compared with those with NFM. From a functional viewpoint, patients with FM have a more severely impaired LVEF at admission that, despite steep improvement during hospitalization, remains lower than that in patients with NFM at long-term follow-up. These findings also hold true when only the viral forms are considered and are different from previous studies showing better prognosis in FM.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5cb99104e64c6f76d2dba4e320b36325