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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
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105 North American and European cases of Lyme carditis, being documented and in part published in the period 1977-1990, are reviewed and compared. The male: female ratio was 3:1, as well in Europe as in the USA. Transient atrioventricular block is the most frequent manifestation of Lyme carditis, with a remarkable similarity in the frequency of complete AV block and attending neurological illness in Europe and the USA. The distribution of (maximal observed) atrioventricular block in all patients existed of 49% third degree, 16% second degree and 12% first degree. Data of electrophysiological studies show that affection of the cardiac conduction system can be local or very diffuse. Other manifestations like rhythm disturbances, (myo)pericarditis and heart failure were less striking and have a less similar frequency in the European and American cases. Medicational therapy seems not to be an unconditional requirement for recovery of Lyme carditis itself, but cannot be withheld because of the proven beneficial effects of antibiotic therapy in other manifestations of Lyme borreliosis. Temporary pacemakers are frequently inserted, but pacemaker implantation is rarely needed. The overall prognosis of Lyme carditis seems to be good, although delayed recovery has been described and possible late manifestations have been suggested.
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PMID:Lyme carditis: clinical characteristics of 105 cases. 194 15

According to current opinion there is acute, self-limiting Lyme carditis, and chronic Lyme carditis. Acute Lyme carditis manifests mostly as transient conduction disorders of the heart (e.g. AV-blocking I to III), and as supraventricular and ventricular rhythm disturbances, pericarditis, myocarditis, and pancarditis in single cases. Chronic Lyme carditis is defined as a case of chronic heart failure confirmed by positive serology and endomyocardial biopsy. Anamnestic aid is rare. Neither tick-bites nor preceding or accompanying erythema chronicum migrans are constantly reported. Seropositivity and control of its specificity by western blot are indicative but no etiological proof. Even histological detection of spirochetes in endomyocardial tissue or cultivation of borrelia from endomyocardial biopsy are no final etiological proof of the respective cardial disorder. Those findings, however, are an indication for antibiotic treatment. According to the severity of the disorder, antibiotics are administered orally (penicillin or derivatives) or parenterally with penicillin or cephalosporins of the 3rd generation over 4 and 2 weeks, respectively.
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PMID:[Lyme borreliosis and cardiomyopathy]. 761 Jun 74

Lyme borreliosis, caused by the tick-borne spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, has been found to cause a variety of clinical syndromes including cardiomyopathy, dermatopathy, neuropathy, and arthropathy. Lyme carditis was originally described as a mild self-limited carditis, primarily involving the conduction system. However, recent reports suggest that cardiac involvement may be more serious than previously suspected, and may cause heart failure and probably congestive cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:[Cardiac manifestations of Borrelia burgdorferi infection (Lyme-borreliosis)]. 823 94

The clinical picture of myocarditis/myopericarditis is of importance in differential diagnosis, especially in younger patients with suspected myocardial infarction. Myocarditis/myopericarditis commonly presents with chest pain, and the diagnosis is usually established on clinical grounds. However, endomyocardial biopsy is necessary to confirm the diagnosis. We evaluated the characteristics of acute myocarditis over the years 1980-1998 in 54 patients of the Department of Medicine of the University Hospital, Zurich. Two to 6 patients per year were hospitalised with this diagnosis. In most cases the diagnosis was established by a combination of criteria, such as a preceding infection of the upper respiratory tract, thoracic pain, ST segment elevations in different precordial leads followed by T wave inversions, arrhythmias, elevation of cardiac enzymes, reversible hypokinesia by echocardiography and normal coronary arteries. At least 3 of 5 criteria were requested. In a first step we analysed retrospectively all patients with acute myocarditis/myopericarditis in the years 1980-1993. Among 30 cases of acute myocarditis/myopericarditis the following causes could be identified: one influenza B, one Toxoplasma gondii infection, 2 Epstein-Barr infections and one bacterial myocarditis with gram-negative rods. The aetiology of the other 25 cases remained unknown. The majority of myocarditis/myopericarditis healed without complications. One patient with Epstein-Barr myocarditis and one with Toxoplasma gondii infection died. Two patients developed dilated cardiomyopathy. In a second phase we analysed prospectively all cases with acute myocarditis/myopericarditis over the period 1994-1998: 24 patients with acute myocarditis/myopericarditis were hospitalised. At that time coronary angiography and endomyocardial biopsies were performed more frequently. We found 2 patients with giant cell myocarditis and 2 with Toxoplasma gondii infection and HIV, all of whom died. In addition, there were 2 patients with eosinophilic myocarditis, one with Lyme carditis, one with Epstein-Barr myocarditis, one with myopericarditis after Campylobacter enteritis and one histologically proven myocarditis after pneumonia with Haemophilus influenzae. The aetiology of the remaining 13 cases with myocarditis/myopericarditis could not be established. Three patients with probable viral myocarditis developed cardiogenic shock requiring intraaortic balloon pump, and fully recovered. The patient with Lyme carditis manifested with total atrioventricular block and was treated with a temporary pacemaker. One patient with lymphocytic myocarditis required heart transplantation because of terminal heart failure and one female patient with histologically proven diffuse lympho-monocytic myocarditis died of cardiogenic shock. All the other cases healed without complications. Serologies are of little diagnostic value and should be restricted to serologies with therapeutic implications. We believe that the apparent increase in myocarditis/myopericarditis in recent years is a result of better diagnostic tools, such as more specific cardiac enzyme tests, coronary angiography and endomyocardial biopsies. In most cases the therapy remains symptomatic. In elected, severe cases steroids and other immunosuppressive drugs are sometimes used.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and course of myocarditis: a survey in the medical clinics of Zurich University Hospital 1980 to 1998]. 1102 70

Heart involvement of Lyme disease occurs in about 4-10% of patients with Lyme borreliosis. The most common manifestation is acute, self-limiting Lyme carditis, which manifests mostly as transient conduction disorders of the heart, pericarditis and myocarditis. Laboratory tests (ELISA, immunoblotting and PCR) usually have limited sensitivity and specificity, and criteria of performance and interpretation have not yet been fully evaluated. Therefore the laboratory evidence should only be interpreted in conjunction with other clinical and diagnostic features. Recently there has been convincing evidence published that long standing dilated cardiomyopathy in many cases is associated with a chronic Borrelia burgdorferi (BB) infection. Several studies showed a higher prevalence of BB antibodies in patients with severe heart failure in endemic areas (e.g., 26% versus 8% in healthy individuals). The isolation of spirochetes from the myocardium gave further evidence that BB may cause chronic heart muscle disease. In several studies antimicrobial treatment showed an improvement of the left ventricular function in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy associated with BB. However the duration of dilated cardiomyopathy before treatment plays an important part in the clinical outcome of BB-associated chronic myocarditis.
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PMID:[Acute myocarditis and cardiomyopathy in Lyme borreliosis]. 1114 72

Cardiac manifestations of Lyme Borreliosis are relatively infrequent, occurring within weeks after the infectious tick bite (median of 21 days), and resulting at this stage from a direct borrelial infection of the myocardium, as indicated by reports of spirochete isolation from pericardium and myocardium. They may persist or appear in the late, tertiary phase of the illness, being then more likely due to infection-triggered autoimmunity. Lyme carditis typically presents with a fluctuating degree of atrioventricular block that spontaneously resolves in several days. Rarely, myocarditis may occur with or without pericardial involvement, in patients presenting with chest pain, ST depression or T wave inversion, mimicking an acute myocardial infarction, and various arrhythmias are reported, as well as pericardial effusion or heart failure. A complete recovery is usually observed, spontaneous or after antibiotherapy. Severe myocarditis or Pericarditis leading to death is exceptional. The diagnosis of Lyme carditis is based on the same association of clinical and laboratory features as in Lyme disease without cardiac involvement. But the occurrence of conduction disturbances in healthy young people suggests screening for other criteria of Lyme disease. The management of Lyme carditis does not differ from the treatment of Lyme disease without carditis and is mainly based upon the use of doxycycline or ceftriaxone.
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PMID:[Cardiac involvement in Lyme disease]. 1762 49

Lyme carditis is a well known disorder; however, its diagnosis still remains a challenge because of varied clinical picture, low incidence rate and difficulties in detection of the aetiological agent (Borrelia burgdorferi). We report a case of a 60-year-old man with a 2.5-year history of dilated cardiomyopathy, recurring episodes of acute heart failure and arrhythmias which finally were diagnosed as Lyme carditis. The diagnosis was confirmed by endomyocardial biopsy that revealed spirochetes as well as by serological tests which showed complexed Borrelia antibodies. The patient responded to treatment with ceftriaxone and doxycycline.
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PMID:[Lyme carditis--a bitter lesson or a delayed diagnostic success--a case report]. 1797 52

Case report of young woman presents involvement of dilated cardiomyopathy and rhythm disturbances in 18 months after infection of tick, with direct assessment of spirochetes in myocardial tissue. Cardial decompensation occured after asthma exacerbation, complicated by bronchopneumonia. Rhythm disturbances and heart failure gradually subside after parenteral antibiotic treatment and peroral treatment of heart failure. Nevertheless there is a long-lasting persistence of dilated cardiomyopathy with significant systolic dysfunction, which is supposedly last consequence of Borrelia infection. Resynchronic therapy combinated with cardioverter-defibrilator primary considering was postponed for improvement clinical condition and myocardial electric stability. There is demonstrating complicated serologic diagnostics of Lyme disease in discussion. Lyme carditis would be part of differential diagnosis in rhythm disturbances and cardiomyopathy of unknown etiology, including serious or fatal events.
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PMID:[Lyme carditis--rare cause of dilated cardiomyopathy and rhythm disturbances]. 1863 Jun 24

Untreated Lyme disease can affect the heart in up to 10% of patients. Its clinical outcome and severity vary, ranging from asymptomatic minor conduction disturbances to potentially fatal arrhythmias and severe heart failure. A history of a tick bite or a typical previous skin lesion (Erythema migrans) may be absent; clinicians should therefore keep a low threshold of suspicion when facing cardiac manifestations in a patient potentially exposed to the disease in endemic areas. We report the case of a patient with Lyme carditis expressed by variable degrees of atrio-ventricular block and review the literature.
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PMID:[Lyme carditis]. 2592 52

The first data of Lyme carditis, a relatively rare manifestation of Lyme disease, were published in eighties of the last century. Clinical manifestations include syncope, light-headedness, fainting, shortness of breath, palpitations, and/or chest pain. Atrioventricular (AV) electrical block of varying severity presents the most common conduction disorder in Lyme carditis. Although is usually mild, AV block can fluctuates rapidly and progress from a prolonged P-R interval to a His-Purkinje block within minutes to hours and days. Rarely, Lyme disease may be the cause of endocarditis, while some studies and reports, based on serological and/or molecular investigations, have suggested possible influence of Borrelia burgdorferi on degenerative cardiac valvular disease. Myocarditis, pericarditis, pancarditis, dilated cardiomyopathy, and heart failure have also been described as possible manifestations of Lyme carditis. The clinical course of Lyme carditis is generally mild, short term, and in most cases, completely reversible after adequate antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:Manifestations of Lyme carditis. 2808 88


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