Elsevier

Human Pathology

Volume 31, Issue 8, August 2000, Pages 988-998
Human Pathology

Original Contributions
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and sudden death in the young: Pathologic evidence of myocardial ischemia

https://doi.org/10.1053/hupa.2000.16659Get rights and content

Abstract

The mechanism underlying cardiac arrest in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HC) is intriguing. In the clinical setting, myocardial ischemia has long been incriminated, particularly in the young. Among 274 cardiovascular sudden deaths in the young ([le ]35 years), 19 (7.0%), 14 males and 5 females, median age 23 years, had HC. Familial occurrence of HC was ascertained in 3 (16%). SD occurred on effort in 6 (31%). Previous syncope occurred in 5 and palpitations in 3. Basal electrocardiogram (ECG) was abnormal in 7 of 8 available cases. Hypertrophy was septal asymmetric in 14. Gross examination showed large isolated or multiple septal scars in 11 (58%); at histomorphometry, the mean percent area of fibrosis of the septal myocardium was 18.6 [plusmn] 6. Four showed a deep intramyocardial course of the left anterior descending coronary artery. At histology, myocardial disarray involved 30 [plusmn] 16% of the septal myocardium; evidence of acute-subacute myocardial necrosis was present in 14 (74%), 1 of them with a regional acute myocardial infarction. By comparing hearts with (n = 11) and without (n = 8) areas of scar-type fibrosis, we found a statistically significant difference in terms of age (25.5 [plusmn] 5.4 v 15.5 [plusmn] 12.4 years, P = .04), septal thickness (25.4 [plusmn] 5.4 v 15.4 [plusmn] 4.9 mm, P [lt ] .001), percent increase of septal thickness versus normal value for age and sex (46.2 [plusmn] 15 v 25.2 [plusmn] 13.6%, P [plusmn] .01) and mean score of small vessel disease (1.7 [plusmn] 0.4 v 1.2 [plusmn] 0.4, P = .04). Linear regression analysis showed a positive correlation of percent area of replacement fibrosis with septal thickness (P = .01) and with mean score of small vessel disease (P [lt ] .01). In conclusion, our pathologic findings of ischemic damage, either acute-subacute or in the form of fibrotic scars, support the clinical evidence that ischemia occurs in the natural history of HC and may contribute to life-threatening electrical instability. HUM PATHOL 31:988-998.

References (0)

Cited by (0)

Supported by the Veneto Region, Venice, and MURST, Rome, Italy

View full text