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Left Ventricular Dilatation
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Left Ventricular Dilatation

View is of left ventricular outflow tract showing aortic valve. Note posterior papillary muscle arising from posterior wall of left ventricle (1 arrow), and anterior papillary muscle arising from anterolateral wall (2 arrows).
The rest of the left ventricular wall is a dilated interventricular septum (
), which shows a flattening of the trabeculae carnae, characteristic of dilatation.
(Description By:J. Hasson, M.D. )
(Image Contrib. by: UCHC )
Dilatation
Etiology

Case of 19 yr. female with SLE, chronic renal failure with hypertension, and dying of an ensuing acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis. The heart weighed 600g due to hypertension, and was dilated.
Causes of dilatation are heart failure, chronic anemia, thiamine deficiency (beri beri heart disease), myocarditis, toxemias of diverse causes associated with shock.
Causes in this case are anemia coupled with a hypertrophied heart subject to failure with sufficient stress, such as the toxemia and shock of acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis.
Pathogenesis

Specifics are unknown.
It is likely that any disease state that results in universal injury to the myocardium, such as anemia, is going to result in less effective fiber contraction, with incremental decreases in ejection fraction causing incremntal compensatory increases in fiber length, until an adequate ejection fraction is restored.
In this case, cardiac hypertrophy with relative coronary insufficiency, anemia, and the shock and toxemia of pancreatitis (metabolic acidosis and a "cytokine storm") are all contributory.,
Epidemiology

Varies with diverse causes.
General Gross Description

The chambers are dilated, with relative thinning of the walls, and characteristic flattening or "ironing out" of the trabeculae carnae in the ventricles.
The myocardium in cases of severe chronic anemia such as untreated pernicious anemia, classically showed fatty deposits within myocardial fibers appearing grossly as yellow stripe-like discolorations described as "tigering" because of the resemblance to tigers.
General Microscopic Description

Elongation of muscle fibers has no distinguishing histologic features. Dilatation is a gross feature.
Clinical Correlation

An indicator of cardiac failure
References

None
Dilatation
Synopsis by: J. Hasson, MD (T32000M32100)[343]
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