Quantitative Analysis of Cardiac Muscle Cell Disorganization in the Ventricular Septum of Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

The presence of numerous abnormally arranged cardiac muscle cells in the ventricular septum has been considered a characteristic anatomic feature of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. To determine the specificity of this histologic marker for patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, we used a quantitative method to determine the area of myocardium occupied by disorganized cells. In hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, septal disorganization was present in 94% of the 54 patients studied at necropsy. Furthermore, disorganization was extensive in most of these patients, involving 5% or more of the transverse plane tissue section in 89% of the patients and 25% or more of the section in 56% of the patients. Septal disorganization was best identified in tissue sections cut perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle. Septal disorganization was present in only 26% of the 144 control patients with other heart diseases or normal hearts. Most important, when present in these patients, disorganization was usually limited in extent. In only 7% of the controls studied did abnormally arranged cells occupy 5% or more of the tissue section. The average area of septum disorganized was 31 ± 3% (mean i SEM) in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and only 1.5 ± 0.6% in the controls (p>0.001). Hence, while the presence of ventricular septal disorganization is not pathognomonic of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, widespread distribution of this abnormality is a very sensitive and specific histologic marker for this disease.

[1]  V. Ferrans,et al.  Myocardial Ultrastructure in Idiopathic Hypertrophic Subaortic Stenosis: A Study of Operatively Excised Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Muscle in 14 Patients , 1972, Circulation.

[2]  R. G. Fraser,et al.  Hereditary cardiovascular dysplasia. A form of familial cardiomyopathy. , 1961, The American journal of medicine.

[3]  M. Davies,et al.  Pathological features of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) in the elderly. , 1975, British heart journal.

[4]  M. Kaltenbach,et al.  Ultrastructural Evaluations in Early and Advanced Congestive Cardiomyopathies , 1978 .

[5]  C. Lambrew,et al.  Idiopathic Hypertrophic Subaortic Stenosis: I. A Description of the Disease Based Upon an Analysis of 64 Patients , 1964, Circulation.

[6]  E. Olsen Postmortem Findings and Histologic, Histochemical, and Electron Microscopic Findings of Myocardial Biopsies , 1978 .

[7]  E. Wigle,et al.  Idiopathic Ventricular Septal Hypertrophy Causing Muscular Subaortic Stenosis , 1962, Circulation.

[8]  B. Maron,et al.  Unusual Evolution of Acquired Infundibular Stenosis in Patients with Ventricular Septal Defect: Clinical and Morphologic Observations , 1973, Circulation.

[9]  A. L. Brown,et al.  The Clinical, Hemodynamic, and Pathologic Diagnosis of Muscular Subvalvular Aortic Stenosis , 1961, Circulation.

[10]  D TEARE,et al.  ASYMMETRICAL HYPERTROPHY OF THE HEART IN YOUNG ADULTS , 1958, British heart journal.

[11]  J. Somerville,et al.  'Isolated' pulmonary valve stenosis as part of more widespread cardiovascular disease. , 1976, British heart journal.

[12]  V. Ferrans,et al.  Congenital Heart Malformations Associated with Disproportionate Ventricular Septal Thickening , 1975, Circulation.

[13]  H. Knieriem Electron-Microscopic Findings in Congestive Cardiomyopathy , 1978 .

[14]  W. Cleland,et al.  OBSTRUCTIVE CARDIOMYOPATHY SIMULATING AORTIC STENOSIS , 1960, British heart journal.

[15]  W. Henry,et al.  Prevalence and Characteristics of Disproportionate Ventricular Septal Thickening in Patients with Acquired or Congenital Heart Diseases: Echocardiographic and Morphologic Findings , 1977, Circulation.

[16]  A. Pearse,et al.  Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, a histological, histochemical, and ultrastructural study of biopsy material. , 1971, Cardiovascular research.

[17]  B. Maron,et al.  Disproportionate Ventricular Septal Thickening in Patients with Systemic Hypertension , 1978 .

[18]  W. Roberts,et al.  "Malignant" hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: identification of a subgroup of families with unusually frequent premature death. , 1978, The American journal of cardiology.

[19]  Pathology of the Heart and Blood Vessels , 1969 .

[20]  B. Maron,et al.  Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS): cardiac pathologic observations in infants with SIDS. , 1977, American heart journal.

[21]  B. Maron,et al.  Disproportionate Ventricular Septal Thickening in the Developing Normal Human Heart , 1978, Circulation.

[22]  William H. Schuette,et al.  A simple video method for the quantification of microscopic objects , 1974 .

[23]  R. Macalpin,et al.  Echocardiographic Diagnosis of Idiopathic Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy without Outflow Obstruction , 1972, Circulation.

[24]  R. Macalpin,et al.  Left ventricular hypertrophy diagnosed by echocardiography. , 1973, The New England journal of medicine.

[25]  J. M. van der Bel-Kahn Muscle fiber disarray in common heart diseases. , 1977, The American journal of cardiology.

[26]  W. Roberts,et al.  Sudden death in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: characterization of 26 patients with functional limitation. , 1978, The American journal of cardiology.

[27]  W. Roberts,et al.  Differences in distribution of myocardial abnormalities in patients with obstructive and nonobstructive asymmetric septal hypertrophy (ASH). Light and electron microscopic findings. , 1974, Circulation.

[28]  I. J. Don Asymmetric septal hypertrophy. , 1976, Minnesota medicine.

[29]  J. Ross,et al.  Fiber Orientation in the Canine Left Ventricle during Diastole and Systole , 1969, Circulation research.

[30]  R. Hibbs,et al.  The atrioventricular valves of the guinea-pig. II. An ultrastructural study. , 1973, The American journal of anatomy.

[31]  A G Stansfeld,et al.  Pathology of the Heart and Blood Vessels. , 1969 .

[32]  W. Henry,et al.  Asymmetric Septal Hypertrophy: Echocardiographic Identification of the Pathognomonic Anatomic Abnormality of IHSS , 1973, Circulation.

[33]  E. Braunwald,et al.  Operative Treatment in Idiopathic Hypertrophic Subaortic Stenosis: Techniques, and the Results of Preoperative and Postoperative Clinical and Hemodynamic Assessments , 1968, Circulation.

[34]  M. Weisfeldt,et al.  Asymmetric Septal Hypertrophy and Myocardial Fiber Disarray: Features of Normal, Developing, and Malformed Hearts , 1977, Circulation.

[35]  J. Somerville,et al.  Congenital heart disease associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. , 1978, British heart journal.

[36]  W. Roberts,et al.  Comparison of Echocardiographic and Necropsy Measurements of Ventricular Wall Thicknesses in Patients with and without Disproportionate Septal Thickening , 1977, Circulation.

[37]  M. A. Douglas,et al.  Use of a video system in the study of ventricular function in man. , 1973, The American journal of cardiology.

[38]  W. Henry,et al.  Prevalence and characteristics of disproportionate ventricular septal thickening in patients with coronary artery disease. , 1978, Circulation.

[39]  W. Roberts,et al.  Ultrastructure of Crista Supraventricularis Muscle in Patients With Congenital Heart Diseases Associated with Right Ventricular Outflow Tract Obstruction , 1975, Circulation.

[40]  W. Roberts Valvular, subvalvular and supravalvular aortic stenosis: morphologic features. , 1973, Cardiovascular clinics.

[41]  W. Henry,et al.  Asymmetric Septal Hypertrophy (ASH) in Infancy , 1974, Circulation.

[42]  W. Roberts,et al.  Asymmetric Septal Hypertrophy in Childhood , 1976, Circulation.