takotsubo
Table of Contents
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TCM) / stress cardiomyopathy / "broken heart"
introduction
- 1st described in Japan in 1990 by Sato et al.
- transient cardiomyopathy which appears to be caused by persistent high levels of circulating catecholamines as a result of an acute stress reaction such as the sudden death of a loved one
- patients may present with features of acute myocardial infarction (AMI/STEMI/NSTEMI) or congestive cardiac failure and while echocardiography will demonstrate ventricular dysfunction mainly of the mid-segments and apical segments (on imaging, ventricles have the shape of a takotsubo or fisherman's octopus pot), angiography is normal unless there is pre-existing coronary disease.
- 1-3% mortality rate
- 95% recover from the cardiomyopathy within 4-8wks
- 20% develop complications such as:
- LVF
- cardiogenic shock
- LV outflow obstruction
- mitral incompetence
- VT or VF
- LV mural wall thrombus
- LV free wall rupture
- ~3% have recurrence
- ECG changes may include:
- ST elevation in anterior and inferior leads
- diffuse T wave inversion with poor R-wave progression
- there may be a modest rise in serum troponin levels
epidemiology
- accounts for ~2% of cases of acute myocardial infarction (AMI/STEMI/NSTEMI)
- most cases are Asian or Caucasian
- a US study of almost 200,000 patients published in 2025 showed 83% were female, 80% were white, White individuals had the highest TC incidence rate, followed by Native Americans, whereas Black people had the lowest incidence. TC patients had a high burden of cardiovascular complications, including atrial fibrillation (20%), CHF (36%), cardiogenic shock (6.6%), stroke (5.3%), and myocardial rupture (0.02%). Mortality was double in males (11.2%) compared to females (5.5%). 1)
- 90% of reported cases are in post-menopausal women
- mean age is 67yrs although it can occur in children and young adults
- most cases follow severe psychological or physical stress such as:
- death of a loved one - hence the reference to “broken heart”
- financial or health mishaps including news of major medical conditions
- major trauma such as a car accident, surgery or ICU
- following a near-drowning
- cases have been reported following following cocaine, methamphetamine, and excessive phenylephrine use
Rx
- Rx is largely supportive, although if there is no severe cardiac failure and no hypotension, beta adrenergic blockers may be of use
- those with a LV mural thrombus will require anticoagulants
references
takotsubo.txt · Last modified: 2025/05/16 09:47 by gary1