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Diagnostic clues for the diagnosis of nonsarcomeric hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (Phenocopies): Amyloidosis, fabry disease, and mitochondrial disease

Authors :
Giuseppe Pacileo
Gemma Salerno
Franco Cecchi
Silvia Castelletti
Tommaso Marrazzo
Antonio Pisani
Marina Verrengia
Perry M. Elliott
Daniele Masarone
Giuseppe Limongelli
Rita Gravino
Marta Rubino
Limongelli, G.
Masarone, D.
Verrengia, M.
Gravino, R.
Salerno, G.
Castelletti, S.
Rubino, M.
Marrazzo, T.
Pisani, A.
Cecchi, F.
Elliott, P.
Pacileo, G.
Limongelli, Giuseppe
Masarone, Daniele
Verrengia, Marina
Gravino, Rita
Salerno, Gemma
Castelletti, Silvia
Rubino, Marta
Marrazzo, Tommaso
Pisani, Antonio
Cecchi, Franco
Elliott, Perry
Pacileo, Giuseppe
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common known inherited heart disorder, with a prevalence of 1: 500 of the adult population. Etiology of HCM can be heterogeneous, with sarcomeric gene disease as the leading cause in up to 60% of the patients, and with a number of possible different diseases (phenocopies) in about 10%-15% of the patients. Early diagnosis of storage and infiltrative disorders, particularly those with specific treatments (i.e., Fabry disease and/or amyloidosis), means early management and treatment, with a significant impact on patients prognosis. Here, we report on four different cases of HCM, highlighting difficulties to make differential diagnosis of different forms of cardiomyopathies, and their potential impact on the management.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ecc6a10e643536f49bb89b9a4d568667