Title:Cardiomyopathy of Pregnancy
Volume: 12
Issue: 1
Author(s): Sharon Einav and Joseph Varon
Affiliation:
Keywords:
Cardiomyopathies, heart failure, pregnancy, ventricular dysfunction.
Abstract: Heart failure is a leading cause of long-term maternal morbidity and
mortality in developed countries. The most common cause of maternal heart failure is
cardiomyopathy. Peripartum Cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is a distinct idiopathic disease
that is not triggered by the hemodynamic changes and myocardial overload
associated with pregnancy. Diagnostic criteria include the development of heart
failure in the time frame between the last months of pregnancy and the months
following delivery, the absence of prior heart disease or other identifiable causes of
heart failure and an echocardiography demonstrating LV ejection fraction<45%
and/or fractional shortening. Diagnosis requires a high level of suspicion; signs of
heart failure may be masked by the pregnancy itself and/or by associated diseases
such as hypertension and preeclampsia. The hallmark of the disease is the typical
reduction in LV function. The incidence of PPCM ranges between 1:100 to 1:3000 live births, and is
particularly high among women of African descent. It remains unclear whether race is a modifier of the
disease or a risk factor unto itself. Plausable causes for the disease include: exacerbation of pregnancyinduced
myocardial injury caused by certain virus strains, genetic and/or environmental factors,
circulating autoantibodies, and a flaw in the normal cardioprotective mechanisms of pregnancy allowing
development of a vasculopathy triggered by abnormal peripartum hormonal changes. Treatment is
comprised of standard heart failure therapy (restriction of salt and water intake, diuretics, angiotensinconverting
enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists, beta blockers and digoxin)
and preventive anticoagulation if the ejection fraction ≤35%. Delivery should be planned and carried out
by a multidiscipliniary team. Maternal health should always take precedence over fetal health. Failed
therapy should prompt further workup (magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the heart and/or cardiac
catheterization and endomyocardial biopsy) and consideration of less conventional treatment modalities
(e.g. immune modulation, bromocriptine), resynchronization, mechanical support and even heart
transplant. The prognosis of PPCM is associated with the severity of heart failure at presentation and the
response to therapy and is generally better than that of other cardiomyopathies. Approximate mortality
rates are <2% in-hospital, 10-15% at 6 months after diagnosis and 25-30% at 2-4 years. Recovery of LV
function occurs in one-third to one-half of the women and may carry on for almost 2 years after
diagnosis. Subsequent pregnancies have been associated with a high likelihood of relapse due to residual
impairment of the LV contractile reserve. There is insufficient data on neonatal outcome.