Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging serves as the non-invasive gold standard for diagnosing myocarditis, a disease with increasingly recognized immune-mediated and iatrogenic etiologies.
Patients with myocarditis
Modern diagnostics (cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, endomyocardial biopsy) and methods of treatment (conservative heart failure therapy, immunomodulatory/immunosuppressive therapy, mechanical circulatory support, heart transplantation)
This review provides an updated overview of myocarditis, emphasizing the importance of cardiac MRI for diagnosis and the evolving landscape of immune-mediated etiologies.
Although the frequency of myocarditis in the general population is very difficult to accurately determine due to the large number of asymptomatic cases, the incidence of this disease is increasing significantly due to better defined criteria for diagnosis and the development of modern diagnostic methods. The multitude of different etiological factors, the diversity of the clinical picture, and the variability of the diagnostic findings make this disease often demanding both for the selection of the diagnostic modality and for the proper therapeutic approach. The previously known most common viral etiology of this disease is today overshadowed by new findings based on immune-mediated processes, associated with diseases that in their natural course can lead to myocardial involvement, as well as the iatrogenic cause of myocarditis, which is due to use of immune checkpoint inhibitors in the treatment of cancer patients. Suspecting that a patient with polymorphic and non-specific clinical signs and symptoms, such as changes in ECG and echocardiography readings, has myocarditis is the starting point in the diagnostic algorithm. Cardio magnetic resonance imaging is non-invasive and is the gold standard for diagnosis and clinical follow-up of these patients. Endomyocardial biopsy as an invasive method is the diagnostic choice in life-threatening cases with suspicion of fulminant myocarditis where the diagnosis has not yet established or there is no adequate response to the applied therapeutic regimen. The treatment of myocarditis is increasingly demanding and includes conservative methods of treating heart failure, immunomodulatory and immunospressive therapy, methods of mechanical circulatory support, and heart transplantation. The goal of developing new diagnostic and therapeutic methods is to reduce mortality from this complex disease, which is still high.
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Ratko Lasica
Interventional Cardiology
Lazar Djukanovic
Centar za Promociju Nauke
Lidija Savić
Interventional Cardiology
Diagnostics
University of Belgrade
Centar za Promociju Nauke
University Hospital Medical Center Bezanijska kosa
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Lasica et al. (Thu,) conducted a review in Myocarditis. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging serves as the non-invasive gold standard for diagnosing myocarditis, a disease with increasingly recognized immune-mediated and iatrogenic etiologies.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a084e4a1e0fcf4a43e8b8a5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13193073