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  • Myocarditis is a rare condition of the heart that can stem from some common viruses and bacterial

  • infections we're all familiar with.

  • It often affects young people, has very few symptoms, and goes largely undiagnoseduntil

  • the autopsy stage.

  • If this already has your heart racing, you'll want to stay put.

  • Myocarditis, is kind of a hard word to pronounce.

  • It stands for myo, which means muscle, card means the heart, and itis means inflammation.

  • My name is DeLisa Fairweather.

  • I'm a PhD researcher from Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida.

  • I've studied myocarditis for about 25 years.

  • It's not like a heart attack where you get pain symptoms or something that alerts you

  • that you have a problem.

  • With myocarditis, you often don't get any symptoms at all related to your heart.

  • Unlike atherosclerosis, which is commonly linked to heart attacks, and involves your

  • vessels and arteries, myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle itself.

  • It's often caused by viral infections.

  • And in the United States, the most common type is called Coxsackie virus.

  • Or, by its more common name, hand, foot, and mouth disease. You may have even experienced this

  • as a child.

  • It usually goes through the daycares, it causes little sores in the mouth, on the fingers, and feet.

  • That's the first time you catch the virus.

  • You actually then catch it every year of your life, so it's a very common virus.

  • You don't get the sores after the first time.

  • Myocarditis can also be caused by other types of viruses such as influenza, hepatitis B

  • and C, and HIV.

  • Coxsackie is something that your body's immune system usually takes care of.

  • But what happens when it gets to your heart?

  • So one of the mysteries that there's been about myocarditis, is why do viruses that normally

  • infect the gut, like enteroviruses, or the flu, which normally infects the lung, why

  • would they go to the heart?

  • And we found out in recent years, the reason they do that, is because they want to hijack an

  • organelle that's called mitochondria.

  • Mitochondria are the energy-producing organellesyou might even say, the powerhousesin our cells.

  • They make what's called ATP or the energy that fuels our bodies.

  • Alongside the brain, the heart and kidneys together represent the body's highest demand

  • for energy.

  • If a cell is a car, you have to have an engine that

  • makes the car run and produces the energy to make the car run.

  • The heart has a lot of them, so rather than just having one engine like our car, a typical

  • heart cell will have 10,000 engines or mitochondria, because it needs so much energy to pump.

  • Typically, viruses travel through the bloodstream and infect the mitochondria,

  • essentially hijacking the powerhouse's normal role to instead replicate the virus.

  • But then, our body's immune system targets that activity and tries to stop this from happening.

  • You can think of the virus really as an enemy.

  • And the immune system is like the fort and it's trying to protect the heart from disease or

  • the intruder.

  • Mast cells or M-A-S-T, those are our allergy cells.

  • They're the watchmen on the wall that are trying to prevent the virus from getting in.

  • Those are the cells that we usually think of as protecting us or causing allergies,

  • but they also do many other things and they're very important at starting an immune response.

  • When they detect it, then they set out an alarm; they send for the large army and the

  • large army are called macrophages.

  • Those are a type of immune cell that is really good at destroying the virus and helping to

  • get rid of the virus.

  • And in most cases, this is a good thing.

  • The macrophages will come in and get rid of the infection, and we never know the difference.

  • But certain activities can put you at a greater risk for sudden death due to this inflammation

  • in the heart.

  • You may have heard of reports where someone was swimming, or they were running a race

  • or a marathon, or playing soccer on the field and suddenly they collapsed, or maybe even

  • they dropped dead.

  • Often at autopsy, that turns out to have been myocarditis and just was not realized.

  • That's because exercise or strenuous action can actually exacerbate this condition.

  • We need the mitochondria to give us more fuel when we exercise.

  • Those mitochondria will actually split.

  • When we exercise, we

  • need more energy, and it's like the engine splits into two engines to provide us even

  • more energy.

  • But when that happens, it allows the virus to accelerate its replication, in turn causing

  • even more inflammation and increasing your risk of acute heart failure.

  • So if there are no symptoms and it's so tricky to diagnose, how do we know when to seek medical

  • attention?

  • The one thing that we have heard from patients where they really have survived, is that

  • they had a gut feeling that something was wrong.

  • So one thing we always tell people is to really trust your gut, and if you feel like something

  • is wrong, just keep going to the doctor and make sure that you get it looked into.

  • So, if you've recently had flu-like symptoms or just haven't been feeling wellmaybe

  • lay off the power squats.

  • And as for the future of diagnosis and treatment...

  • The good news is that we are developing new imaging methods to detect myocarditis.

  • It's going to make it easier for doctors to be able to work out that you have myocarditis

  • And we're also working on new methods to be able to prevent myocarditis, to reduce the inflammation,

  • and reduce whether you're going to progress from myocarditis to dilated cardiomyopathy.

  • The healthcare profession in general is getting really good at saving people's lives when

  • they're having sudden heart failure.

  • So if you get into a hospital and you are having problems, then it is really very high chance

  • that your life is going to be saved.

Myocarditis is a rare condition of the heart that can stem from some common viruses and bacterial

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