|
Other
Forms of Heart Disease
|
|

OTHER FORMS
OF HEART DISEASE
In addition to the relatively common heart diseases
described above, a wide variety of other diseases can also
affect the heart. These include tumors, heart damage from
other diseases such as syphilis and tuberculosis, and
inflammation of the heart muscle, pericardium, or
endocardium.
Myocarditis, or inflammation of the heart muscle, was
commonly caused by rheumatic fever in the past. Today, many
cases are due to a viral infection or their cause cannot be
identified. Sometimes myocarditis simply goes away on its
own. In a minority of patients, who often suffer repeated
episodes of inflammation, myocarditis leads to permanent
damage of the heart muscle, reducing the heart’s ability to
pump blood and making it prone to developing abnormal
rhythms.
Cardiomyopathy encompasses any condition that damages and
weakens the heart muscle. Scientists believe that viral
infections cause many cases of cardiomyopathy. Other causes
include vitamin B deficiency, rheumatic fever, underactivity
of the thyroid gland, and a genetic disease called
hemochromatosis in which iron builds up in the heart muscle
cells. Some types of cardiomyopathy can be controlled with
medication, but others lead to progressive weakening of the
heart muscle and sometimes result in heart failure.
In pericarditis, the most common disorder of the
pericardium, the saclike membrane around the heart becomes
inflamed. Pericarditis is most commonly caused by a viral
infection, but may also be due to arthritis or an autoimmune
disease such as systemic lupus erythematosus. It may be a
complication of late-stage kidney disease, lung cancer, or
lymphoma; it may be a side effect of radiation therapy or
certain drugs. Pericarditis sometimes goes away without
treatment, but it is often treated with anti- inflammatory
drugs. It usually causes no permanent damage to the heart.
If too much fluid builds up around the heart during an
attack of pericarditis, the fluid may need to be drained
with a long needle or in a surgical procedure. Patients who
suffer repeated episodes of pericarditis may have the
pericardium surgically removed.
Endocarditis is an infection of the inner lining of the
heart, but damage from such an infection usually affects
only the heart valves. Endocarditis often develops when
bacteria from elsewhere in the body enter the bloodstream,
settle on the flaps of one of the heart valves, and begin to
grow there. The infection can be treated with antibiotics,
but if untreated, endocarditis is often fatal. People with
congenital heart defects, valve damage due to rheumatic
fever, or other valve problems are at greatest risk for
developing endocarditis. They often take antibiotics as a
preventive measure before undergoing dental surgery or
certain other types of surgery that can allow bacteria into
the bloodstream. Intravenous drug users who share needles
are another population at risk for endocarditis. People who
use unclean needles, which allow bacteria into the
bloodstream, frequently develop valve damage.
|