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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

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Title: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy


1
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
  • Frank and Mehta

2
Definition
  • The term cardiomyopathy is purely descriptive,
    meaning disease of the heart muscle
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a disease in
    which the heart muscle (myocardium) becomes
    abnormally thick or hypertrophied. This
    thickened heart muscle can make it harder for the
    heart to pump blood. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
    may also affect the heart's electrical system
  • In most people, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
    doesn't cause severe problems and they're able to
    live a normal life. In a small number of people
    with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the thickened
    heart muscle can cause symptoms such as shortness
    of breath, problems in the heart's electrical
    system resulting in life-threatening arrhythmias
    and sudden cardiac death. Hypertrophic
    cardiomyopathy is the most common cause of
    heart-related sudden death in people under 30

3
The myocardial disarray
  • Microscopic examination of the heart muscle
    shows that it is abnormal. The normal alignment
    of muscle cells is absent and this abnormality is
    called myocardial disarray. This disarray can
    contribute to an irregular heartbeat (arrhythmia)
    in some people.

4
  • Synonyms HOCM, IHSS and muscular sub-aortic
    stenosis
  • 1 in 500 of the UK population suffers from the
    disease
  • Note that thickening of LV wall resembling HCM
    occurs in other disease states Noonans
    syndrome, Mitochondrial myopathies, Friedreich
    ataxia,metabolic disorder,Anderson-Fabry
    disease,LV-non compaction and cardiac amyloidoses.

5
Hypertrophy
6
Differential diagnosis
  • HCM
  • Athletic heart
  • Can be asymmetric
  • Wall thickness gt 15 mm
  • LA gt 40 mm
  • LVEDD lt 45 mm
  • Diastolic function always abnormal
  • Concentric regresses
  • lt 15 mm
  • lt 40 mm
  • gt 45 mm
  • Normal

7
Stimulus
  • Unknown
  • Disorder of intracellular calcium metabolism
  • Neural crest disorder
  • Papillary muscle malpositioned and misoriented

8
Genetics and molecular diagnosis
  • Mandelian autosomal dominant trait.
  • Mutations in any of the 10 genes, each encoding
    protein component of cardiac sarcomere
  • Beta-myosin heavy chain(first identified)
    chromosome 14. Myosin-binding protein C and
    cardiac troponin T comprise more than half
    genotyped patients to date. Regulatory and
    essential myosin light chains, titin,
    alpha-tropomyosin, alpha-actin, cardiac troponin
    I and alpha myosin heavy chain account for fewer
    cases. http//genepath.med.harvard.edu/seidman/cg
    3/

9
genetic basis
10
  • Phenotypic expression of HCM(LVH) is product not
    only of casual mutation, but also of modifier
    genes and environmental factors.
  • Increased risk of atrial fibrillation in HCM
    identified with beta-myosin heavy chain Arg 663
    His mutation. Not all the individuals harbouring
    the gene defects will express clinical features
    of HCM.(note silent mutations).
  • Substantial LV modelling with spontaneous LVH
    occurs associated with accelerated body growth
    and maturation(adolescence )

11
Pedigree
  • autosomnal dominant
  • passed on from affected males and females
  • The disease does not skip generations

12
Variants of HCM
  • Most common location subaortic , septal, and
    ant. wall.
  • Asymmetric hypertrophy (septum and ant. wall) 70
    .
  • Basal septal hypertrophy 15- 20 .
  • Concentric LVH 8-10 .
  • Apical or lateral wall lt 2 (25 in
    Japan/Asia) characteristic giant T-wave
    inversion laterally spade-like left ventricular
    cavity more benign.

13
  • The major abnormality of the heart in HCM is an
    excessive thickening of the muscle. Thickening
    usually begins during early adolescence and stops
    when growth has finished, ie late teens to early
    twenties. It is uncommon for thickening to
    progress after this age
  • The left ventricle is almost always affected, and
    in some patients the muscle of the right
    ventricle also thickens.
  • It can be seen from Figure that the hypertrophy
    is usually greatest in the wall separating the
    left and right chambers of the heart (the
    septum). The muscle thickening in this region may
    be sufficient to narrow the outflow tract . In
    some patients this thickening is associated with
    obstruction to the flow of blood out of the heart
    into the major blood vessel, the aorta.

14
  • In some cases of asymmetric septal hypertrophy,
    obstruction to the outflow of blood from the
    heart may occur, as shown here. The mitral valve
    touches the septum, blocking the outflow tract.
    Some blood is leaking back through the mitral
    valve (mitral regurgitation)

15
The variants
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Pathophysiology of HCM
  • Dynamic LV outflow tract obstruction
  • Diastolic dysfunction
  • Myocardial ischemia
  • Mitral regurgitation
  • Arrhythmias

18
Pathophysiology
  • Left ventricular outflow tract gradient
  • ? with decreased preload, decreased afterload, or
    increased contractility.
  • Venturi effect anterior mitral valve leaflets
    chordae sucked into outflow tract ?
  • ? obstruction, eccentric jet of MR in mid-late
    systole.

19
Left ventricular outflow tract gradient
  • Approximately 25 of patients with HCM have a
    dynamic systolic pressure gradient in the left
    ventricular outflow tract caused by contact
    between the mitral valve leaflet(s) and the
    interventricular septum under resting conditions
  • Outflow tract gradient in excess of 30 mmHg is an
    important cause of symptoms.
  • Some authors believe that the gradient is simply
    a consequence of high velocity flow through the
    aortic valve, and hence does not represent a real
    obstruction to cardiac output.
  • However, if the gradient is greater than 50 mmHg,
    the percentage of systolic volume ejected before
    the beginning of SAM is greatly reduced and this
    is probably responsible for patients' symptoms
    when severe, outflow tract gradient can cause
    dyspnoea, chest pain, syncope, and predisposes to
    the development of atrial arrhythmias it is
    also an independent predictor of disease
    progression and adverse outcome, including sudden
    death

20
Physical examination
  • Maneuvers that ? end-diastolic volume
  • (? venous return afterload, ? contractility)
  • Vasodilators
  • Inotropes
  • Dehydration
  • Valsalva
  • Amyl nitrite
  • Exercise
  • ? ? HCM murmur

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General considerations for natural history and
clinical course
  • Clinical presentation in any phase from infancy
    to old age.variable clinical course 25 of
    cohort achieve normal longevity.
  • Course of many patients may be punctated by
    adverse clinical events sudden cardiac death,
    embolic stroke, and consequences of heart failure
  • Progressive symptoms largely of exertional
    dyspnea, chest pain, impaired conciousness,
    syncope near-syncope or pre-syncope depending on
    functionality of LV systole, progression to
    advanced congestive heart failure(end-stage
    phase!) with LV remodelling and systolic
    dysfunction, complications attributable to AF,
    including embolic stroke.
  • Triad DOE(per exclusionem), angina,
    presyncope/syncope
  • Sustained V-Tach and V-Fib most likely mechanism
    of syncope/ sudden death.
  • Dependant on atrial kick CO ? by 40 if A. Fib
    present.
  • Note poor prognosis in case of male patient,
    yonger age family Hx. For sudden death, Hx. Of
    syncope, exercise induced hypotention(worst)

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Brockenbrough response
  • In PVC augmented preload, increased
    contractibility, in HCM worsening of LVOT
    obstruction increase in pressure gradient.
  • Normal subjects following PVC shows a
    proportional increase in Ao systolic and LV
    systolic pressures.

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Management
  • The first step in developing a treatment plan is
    to demonstrate whether or not a dynamic left
    ventricular outflow tract obstruction is present.
  • Physical examination should reveal a dynamic
    outflow tract murmur often accompanied by a bifid
    carotid impulse.
  • The treatment of hypertrophic obstructive
    cardiomyopathy has been divided into
    pharmacologic therapy versus more invasive
    procedures (dual-chamber pacing, catheter-based
    septal ablation, and septal myectomy)

28
Pharmacologic Therapy
  • the goal of medications in hypertrophic
    cardiomyopathy is to blunt these
    catecholamine-induced phenomena
  • Drugs, which suppress contractility (negative
    inotropic agents) and suppress heart rate
    (negative chronotropic agents), have been the
    mainstays of therapy.
  • Beta-adrenergic receptor blockers, calcium entry
    blockers, and disopyramide have been the drugs of
    choice.
  • Since most patients have symptoms only with
    exertion, the resting gradient should not be used
    as assessment of efficacy of medical therapy. The
    calcium channel blockers are a good alternative
    if a beta-blocker cannot be tolerated.

29
Dual-Chamber Pacing
  • In the patient with sinus rhythm, the normal
    activation and contraction sequence of the left
    ventricle results in the base of the heart
    commencing contraction prior to the apical
    portion.
  • This results in septal contraction which
    projects into the left ventricular outflow tract
    with subsequent left ventricular outflow
    obstruction.
  • Pacing the ventricle from the right ventricular
    apical lead position allows the apical segments
    to contract prior to the basal segments and helps
    with ventricular emptying before the outflow
    obstruction can occur.
  • Chronic pacing may result in remodeling of the
    ventricle, such that there is widening of the
    left ventricular outflow tract to further
    decrease the gradient.
  • Dual-chamber pacing of both the atrium and the
    ventricle is necessary for synchronization of
    atrial and ventricular contraction

30
  • The gold standard for symptomatic relief in
    patients with hypertrophic obstructive
    cardiomyopathy is septal myectomy. Via an
    aortotomy, the ventricular septum is debulked at
    the basal and mid-ventricular levels. Additional
    muscle is usually removed from the anterior wall
    as well. This results in immediate enlargement in
    left ventricular outflow tract and abolishment of
    the gradient in most cases . In addition, if
    mitral regurgitation is secondary to the
    distortion of the mitral valve leaflets from the
    systolic anterior motion, the mitral
    regurgitation is also abolished. All of this
    results in a significant decrease in filling
    pressures and a significant improvement in
    diastolic filling of the heart.

31
Echocardiographic still frames from the
parasternal long-axis. The left images were
obtained prior to surgical myectomy, while the
right images were obtained after myectomy in the
same patient. The bottom images are magnified
views of the left ventricular outflow tract. Note
the surgical "bite" from the septum and
enlargement of the outflow tract. Ao aortic
root, LA left atrium, LV left ventricle.
32
  • It is important to recognize that the ideal
    patient for septal myectomy has idiopathic
    hypertrophy localized to the basal ventricular
    septum.

33
Echocardiographic still frames from the apical
long-axis. Note the massively enlarged papillary
muscle inserting directly into the anterior
mitral leaflet (arrows). The left image is a
diastolic frame and the right image is a systolic
frame. There is obstruction caused by the
hypertrophied papillary muscle at the mid-cavity
level in this patient. LA left atrium, LV
left ventricle, RV right ventricle.
34
Non-Surgical Septal Ablation
Echocardiographic still frames (systole) from the
parasternal long-axis. The image on the left is
prior to catheter-based septal ablation, while
the right image was obtained at follow-up 3
months after the procedure. Note the systolic
anterior motion of the mitral valve causing
obstruction in the baseline image, which is
abolished due to akinesis of the septum at
follow-up (arrows). Ao aortic root, LA left
atrium, LV left ventricle.
35
  • Recent interest has been generated with a
    catheter-based therapy-septal ablation. With this
    procedure, installation of ethyl alcohol is
    performed through a PTCA balloon catheter and
    carefully selected septal perforator branches.
    This results in a localized myocardial infarction
    of the basal septum. There have been cases where
    intractable ventricular fibrillation has occurred
    during the procedure. Large ventricular septal
    defects resulting in death have occurred. Also,
    there have been reported cases where the alcohol
    diffuses through collateral circulation to
    involve the entire wall, resulting in a large
    anteroapical myocardial infarction.

36
HCM Patients Without Obstruction
  • The activation of the local (myocardial tissue)
    renin-angiotensin cascade (RAS) has been reported
    in HCM and other hypertrophic ventricles.
    Inhibition of the tissue RAS via intracoronary
    infusions of ACE inhibitor can improve diastolic
    properties. However, systemic administration has
    not been widely studied. Caution must be taken
    prior to commencing therapy with antagonists of
    RAS (ACE inhibitor, angiotensin receptor blocker,
    etc.) that the patients have no resting or
    inducible outflow gradient. The afterload
    reduction that is produced by these agents can
    exacerbate the obstructive tendency, and
    counteract any gains made in diastolic function.
    Drugs, which slow or blunt the heart rate, can
    facilitate left ventricular filling by
    maintaining an adequate diastolic filling period.
    Additionally, low-dose diuretics can be useful
    adjuncts in non-obstructive HCM. A novel surgical
    technique has been developed for patients with
    severely limiting dyspnea and apical HCM.
    Debulking of the apical myocardium results in a
    larger ventricular cavity and improved operating
    compliance at end-diastole

37
Prevention of Sudden Death in HCM
  • Patients who have been resuscitated from cardiac
    arrest or have sustained ventricular tachycardia
    are clearly at increased risk.
  • secondary prevention of sudden death with
    implantable defibrillator appears to be
    efficacious
  • Primary prevention of sudden is much more
    difficult. HCM with one or more first-degree
    relatives who have had SCD would appear to be a
    great risk. Those with the most severe forms of
    hypertrophy have also been reported to harbor
    increased risk. Other factors such as
    nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, syncope in
    young patients, perfusion defects, hypotensive
    response to exercise, etc., have also been
    studied in HCM. The approach to place ICDs in
    patients with prior cardiac arrest, sustained
    ventricular tachycardia, or a significant family
    history of sudden death should be considered.

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References
  • http//www.cardiovascularultrasound.com/content/6/
    1/19
  • http//www.escardio.org/guidelines-surveys/esc-gui
    delines/GuidelinesDocuments/guidelines-HCM-FT.pdf
  • http//www.mayoclinic.com/health/hypertrophic-card
    iomyopathy/DS00948/DSECTIONrisk-factors
  • http//www.mayoclinic.org/hypertrophic-cardiomyopa
    thy/physiciansguide.html
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