Myocarditis is an inflammation of the muscular walls of the heart. The inflammation damages the individual heart muscle cells. When too many heart muscle cells are damaged, the heart can't pump effectively. The process may be rapid and may result in death. More commonly, the heart begins to heal itself. Heart muscle heals by changing dead cells to scar tissue. Scar tissue does not contract and can't help the heart to pump. If enough scar tissue forms, heart failure may result.
Many things can inflame the heart. Causes of myocarditis include:
What starts the inflammation is not always known. When the cause of myocarditis is not known it is called idiopathic myocarditis.
Sometimes there are no symptoms. When symptoms occur, they are the symptoms of heart failure, such as:
Your healthcare provider will ask about your symptoms and examine you. He or she will listen to your heart with a stethoscope.
The first test is usually an echocardiogram (an ultrasound scan of the heart).
Myocarditis can best be diagnosed by examining a small piece of heart muscle under a microscope. This test is called a biopsy. You will be given a local anesthetic so that you will not feel any pain during the procedure. Samples of the heart muscle are taken with a bioptome. A bioptome is a thin, flexible tube (catheter) with small cutting jaws at its tip. The bioptome is inserted through a vein in your neck and then moved through the vein into your heart. The cutting jaws remove very small pieces of muscle from inside the heart. Results will be available within 48 hours.
Once myocarditis is diagnosed, you may have blood tests to see if infection is the cause.
The goals of treatment are to help the heart pump as it heals itself and to limit the amount of damage as much as possible. Drugs, and sometimes a device called an intraaortic balloon pump, are used. Complications of myocarditis, such as heart failure, can be treated if they occur.
About one third of people who have had myocarditis return to normal after several weeks to several months. The rest have permanent damage to the heart muscle. The damage can range from slight to severe. There are effective treatments for people whose hearts do not return to normal.