Dilated cardiomyopathy

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Dilated cardiomyopathy

Cardio Playlist

Cardio Playlist

Cardiovascular system anatomy and physiology
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Normal heart sounds
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Blood pressure, blood flow, and resistance
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Laminar flow and Reynolds number
Compliance of blood vessels
Pressures in the cardiovascular system
Physiological changes during exercise
Cardiovascular changes during hemorrhage
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Measuring cardiac output (Fick principle)
Cardiac and vascular function curves
Altering cardiac and vascular function curves
Stroke volume, ejection fraction, and cardiac output
Frank-Starling relationship
Pressure-volume loops
Changes in pressure-volume loops
Cardiac work
Cardiac preload
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Law of Laplace
Baroreceptors
Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
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Cardiac conduction system
Action potentials in pacemaker cells
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Cardiac conduction velocity
Excitability and refractory periods
Cardiac excitation-contraction coupling
Cardiac contractility
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ECG normal sinus rhythm
ECG rate and rhythm
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ECG cardiac hypertrophy and enlargement
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Cerebral circulation
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Control of blood flow circulation
Microcirculation and Starling forces
Myocardial infarction
Angina pectoris
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Tricuspid valve disease
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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
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Class I antiarrhythmics: Sodium channel blockers
Class II antiarrhythmics: Beta blockers
Class III antiarrhythmics: Potassium channel blockers
Class IV antiarrhythmics: Calcium channel blockers and others
ACE inhibitors, ARBs and direct renin inhibitors
Miscellaneous lipid-lowering medications
Lipid-lowering medications: Fibrates
Lipid-lowering medications: Statins
Positive inotropic medications
Sympatholytics: Alpha-2 agonists
Adrenergic antagonists: Alpha blockers
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cGMP mediated smooth muscle vasodilators
Calcium channel blockers
Heart failure: Pathology review
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Cyanotic congenital heart defects: Pathology review
Cardiac and vascular tumors: Pathology review
Endocarditis: Pathology review
Vasculitis: Pathology review
Heart blocks: Pathology review
Cardiomyopathies: Pathology review
Dyslipidemias: Pathology review
Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism: Pathology review
Pericardial disease: Pathology review
Hypertension: Pathology review
Coronary artery disease: Pathology review
Acyanotic congenital heart defects: Pathology review
Peripheral artery disease: Pathology review
Coronary artery disease: Clinical
Heart failure: Clinical
Syncope: Clinical
Hypertension: Clinical
Pericardial disease: Clinical
Infective endocarditis: Clinical
Valvular heart disease: Clinical
Cardiomyopathies: Clinical
Hypercholesterolemia: Clinical
Aortic aneurysms and dissections: Clinical

Transcript

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Cardiomyopathy translates to “heart muscle disease,” so cardiomyopathy is a broad term used to describe a variety of issues that result from disease of the myocardium, or heart muscle.

When cardiomyopathy develops as a way to compensate for some other underlying disease, such as hypertension or valve diseases, it’s called secondary cardiomyopathy. When it develops all by itself, it’s called primary cardiomyopathy.

Now, the most common type is dilated cardiomyopathy, which can cause all four chambers of the heart to dilate, or get bigger. Specifically, new sarcomeres, or muscle units, in the walls are added in series, and the chambers grow larger, which leaves the walls relatively thin compared to the large chamber size, with less muscle to use for contraction.

In other words, they have really weak contractions, which means less blood is pumped out each contraction. This also means that there’s a lower stroke volume, and if the heart’s failing to pump out as much blood to both the body from the left ventricle, and the lungs from the right ventricle, patients develop biventricular congestive heart failure. Since contraction happens during systole, we say this is a type of systolic heart failure.

Also, when the chambers get larger, they tend to stretch out the valves that separate the atria and ventricles. When they are stretched, the valves can’t close all the way, so they start to regurgitate blood back into the atria. This is called mitral valve regurgitation on the left side, and tricuspid valve regurgitation on the right. Mitral valve regurgitation might be heard on auscultation as a holosystolic murmur, meaning that it happens throughout systole.

Additionally, you might also hear an S3 heart sound on auscultation, which is the result of blood rushing and slamming into the dilated ventricular wall during diastole.

Another complication can be arrhythmias, because stretching out the muscle walls can irritate the cells in the conduction system, which are within those walls. Sometimes, an X-ray can be helpful for a diagnosing dilated cardiomyopathy.

As far as causes go, primary dilated cardiomyopathy is most often idiopathic, meaning there isn’t a clearly identifiable cause. Some cases, however, can be traced back to specific genetic mutations or genetic conditions, such as Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy and hemochromatosis. Also, in some cases it can be caused by an infection, like coxsackievirus B, which causes myocarditis — inflammation of the heart muscle — or Chagas disease, a protozoal infection.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 8E" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  4. "The Diagnosis and Evaluation of Dilated Cardiomyopathy" Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2016)
  5. "Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy" New England Journal of Medicine (1994)
  6. "Dilated cardiomyopathy" Nature Reviews Disease Primers (2019)