» Articles » PMID: 10408792

Enteroviral Genome in Native Hearts May Influence Outcome of Patients Who Undergo Cardiac Transplantation

Overview
Date 1999 Jul 17
PMID 10408792
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The Enterovirus may be the most common agent responsible for viral myocarditis and cardiomyopathy. Very little of the literature is available concerning the follow-up of patients who underwent transplantation with enteroviral positivity in native hearts. In the present study, 45 explanted hearts from patients who underwent orthotopic heart transplant at University of Padova were studied by reverse transcriptase (RT)-polymerase chain reaction (PCR): 27 patients had dilated cardiomyopathy (DC), 12 had ischemic cardiopathy (IC), 2 had valvular disease (VD), 2 had arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC), 1 had giant cell myocarditis (GCM), and 1 had lymphocytic myocarditis (LM). Two sets of PCR primers from the highly conserved region of Enterovirus and Rhinovirus were used. Samples of both ventricles and septum were analyzed in every patients. The RT-PCR and nucleotide sequencing of amplicons were also performed on all post-transplantation follow-up biopsies in patients with Enterovirus positivity in the native heart. The viral genome was detectable in only 1 of 27 patients with DC (3%) and in 1 patient with LM. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the amplified product showed differences in nucleotide sequence of PCR samples compared with the sequence of the coxsackievirus B3 used in the current study. The patient with Enterovirus-positive DC showed a higher index of severe rejection (>3A) in the first 6 months, compared with the other patients tested. The patient with Enterovirus-positive LM died of disease recurrence 2 months after transplantation. The present study reveals a scarce presence of Enterovirus in the myocardium of patients with chronic myocardial disease. Because Enterovirus infection was predictive of a poor prognosis in these two patients, molecular studies are useful in excluding viral involvement in native hearts of transplanted patients.

Citing Articles

Classification and histological, immunohistochemical, and molecular diagnosis of inflammatory myocardial disease.

Basso C, Calabrese F, Angelini A, Carturan E, Thiene G Heart Fail Rev. 2012; 18(6):673-81.

PMID: 23096264 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-012-9355-6.


Viral epidemiologic shift in inflammatory heart disease: the increasing involvement of parvovirus B19 in the myocardium of pediatric cardiac transplant patients.

Breinholt J, Moulik M, Dreyer W, Denfield S, Kim J, Jefferies J J Heart Lung Transplant. 2010; 29(7):739-46.

PMID: 20456978 PMC: 2902647. DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2010.03.003.


Active versus borderline myocarditis: clinicopathological correlates and prognostic implications.

Angelini A, CROSATO M, Boffa G, Calabrese F, Calzolari V, Chioin R Heart. 2002; 87(3):210-5.

PMID: 11847154 PMC: 1767046. DOI: 10.1136/heart.87.3.210.


Postmortem diagnosis in sudden cardiac death victims: macroscopic, microscopic and molecular findings.

Basso C, Calabrese F, Corrado D, Thiene G Cardiovasc Res. 2001; 50(2):290-300.

PMID: 11334833 PMC: 7202452. DOI: 10.1016/s0008-6363(01)00261-9.