Myocardial disarray at junction of ventricular septum and left and right ventricular free walls in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. |
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Authors: | T Kuribayashi W C Roberts |
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Affiliation: | Pathology Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. |
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Abstract: | The abnormality of the myocardium in hearts with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HC) was assessed regarding whether the muscle bundle in the mid-wall layer maintains its normal circular and continuous orientation surrounding the left ventricular (LV) cavity. Forty-seven autopsied hearts with HC were examined. The LV wall midway between the base and apex was divided into 6 segments in the transverse plane. Histologically, the circular orientation was destroyed largely or completely due to marked fascicle disarray in 77% of the anterior and posterior junctional segments. In 33% of the middle portion of the ventricular septum and in 34% of the anterior and posterior portions of the LV free wall, the midwall layer showed disarray of muscle fibers or small fascicles. In contrast, the lateral LV free wall was devoid of disarranged fibers in its midwall layer. Myocardial fibrosis usually was predominant in the portion where disarray was marked. There were deep tissue clefts often in the area of junction. In 11 hearts (7 from patients aged > 65 years), the circular unit was intact in almost every segment, as it was in 9 of 10 control hearts. The destruction of the circular unit in the area of septal-free wall junctions in most patients with HC is a previously undescribed morphologic feature of HC. This discontinuity may result from retention of an abnormal fetal myocardial architecture in which the septal latitudinal muscle was continuous with the right ventricular free wall. |
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