Back to Search Start Over

Lymphocytes Infiltrate the Quadriceps Muscle in Lymphocytic Myocarditis Patients: A Potential New Diagnostic Tool

Authors :
Diana Wouters
Sacha Zeerleder
Walter J Paulus
Stephane Heymans
Paul A.J. Krijnen
Anna-Pia Papageorgiou
Marieke S. van Ham
Lawrence Rozendaal
Jean-Luc Murk
Paolo Carai
Sevgi Seven-Deniz
Albert C. van Rossum
Stefanie Smit
Linde Woudstra
Hans W.M. Niessen
Reindert W. Emmens
Pathology
Physiology
Cardiology
Cardio-thoracic surgery
ICaR - Heartfailure and pulmonary arterial hypertension
Cardiologie
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Cardiologie (9)
RS: CARIM - R2 - Cardiac function and failure
Landsteiner Laboratory
Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Clinical Haematology
Source :
The Canadian journal of cardiology, 30(12), 1547-1554. Pulsus Group Inc., Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 30(12), 1547-1554. Pulsus Group Inc., Emmens, R, Woudstra, L, Papageorgiou, A, Carai, P, Smit, S, Seven-Deniz, S, Rozendaal, L, Paulus, W J, Wouters, D, Zeerleder, S, Murk, J L, van Ham, M S, Heymans, S, van Rossum, A C, Niessen, H W M & Krijnen, P A J 2014, ' Lymphocytes infiltrate the quadriceps muscle in lymphocytic myocarditis patients : a potential new diagnostic tool ', The Canadian journal of cardiology, vol. 30, no. 12, pp. 1547-1554 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cjca.2014.07.018, Canadian journal of cardiology, 30(12), 1547-1554. Pulsus Group Inc.
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Pulsus Group Inc., 2014.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diagnosing lymphocytic myocarditis (LM) is challenging because of the large variation in clinical presentation and the limitations inherent in current diagnostic tools. The objective of this study was to analyze infiltration of inflammatory cells in quadriceps skeletal muscle of LM patients and investigate the potential diagnostic value of assaying infiltrating inflammatory cells.METHODS: Quadriceps muscle tissue, obtained at autopsy from control patients (n = 9) and LM patients (n = 21), was analyzed using immunohistochemistry for infiltration of lymphocytes (CD45), macrophages (CD68), neutrophilic granulocytes (myeloperoxidase), and several lymphocyte subtypes (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20) and using polymerase chain reaction for a panel of myocarditis-associated viruses. Additionally, quadriceps muscle from mice with acute coxsackievirus B3-induced myocarditis and control mice was analyzed for presence of lymphocytes and virus.RESULTS: In quadriceps muscle of LM patients the number of infiltrating lymphocytes were significantly increased and LM was diagnosed with specificity of 100% and sensitivity of 71%. Parvovirus B19 was the primary virus found in our patient groups, found in quadriceps tissue of 3 LM patients (although it was also found in 1 control patient). In the mice, enteroviral RNA was present in the quadriceps muscle, although enteroviral capsid proteins and lymphocyte infiltration were found primarily in the adipose tissue within and directly adjacent to the myocyte tissue, rather than in the myocyte tissue itself.CONCLUSIONS: LM is associated with lymphocyte infiltration and viral presence in quadriceps muscle. This indicates that skeletal muscle biopsy/lymphocyte quantification might be a potential diagnostic tool for LM patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0828282X
Volume :
30
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6eee3ca4bd5fd43e6c87d99a070721d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cjca.2014.07.018