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Cardiomyopathy is disease of the heart muscle. It makes it harder for the heart to pump blood. There are different types of the disease. Any of them can cause the heart muscle to get larger, thicken, or become stiff. They keep the heart muscle from pumping enough blood to meet the body's needs.
There are 4 types of cardiomyopathy that can affect children:
Cardiomyopathy differs from many other heart problems in several ways:
Cardiomyopathy can have a number of causes. They include:
Often, the exact cause is never found. This is called idiopathic. Because some types are genetic, close family members may need screening.
DCM is the most common form of cardiomyopathy. The heart muscle becomes enlarged and stretched (dilated). This causes the heart to become weak. It can't pump well. Problems that may happen with DCM include:
Infections lead to inflammation of the heart muscle (myocarditis). The infections are often from viruses. This is one of the most commonly found causes of DCM. Many other cases are likely inherited. Many children with DCM have a family member with the disease.
DCM can also be caused by having contact with toxins or very strong medicines. This includes some types of chemotherapy used to treat cancer. Gene changes can also be involved in DCM. In many cases, the cause for this type of the disease isn't found.
When the heart muscle is weak and can't pump enough blood to meet the body's demands, the body may try to reduce blood flow to some areas of the body. This keeps blood flow to vital organs, such as the brain and kidneys. Areas like the skin and muscles may get less blood.
These are the most common symptoms of DCM:
Your child's doctor may recommend medicines to:
In some cases, DCM caused by a virus gets better over time. In other cases, the condition gets worse. Your child may need a heart transplant if the heart muscle does not recover. Talk with your child's doctor for more information about your child's case.
In HCM, the muscle of the heart becomes thicker than normal. This can affect the heart's ability to pump blood to the rest of the body.
The thickened muscle may also affect the heart's mitral valve. This valve separates the left atrium and the left ventricle. It may become leaky. This lets blood flow backward from the left ventricle into the left atrium, instead of forward to the rest of the body.
HCM is often inherited. About half of children with the disease have a parent or sibling with some thickening of the left ventricular muscle or ventricular wall.
Children with HCM may have symptoms that get worse with exertion. But symptoms may often be hard to predict.
The most common symptoms of HCM are:
Your child's doctor may recommend medicine to:
Surgery may include:
Talk with your child's doctor for more information about your child's case.
RCM is an uncommon type of cardiomyopathy. It happens when the heart muscle of the ventricles becomes too stiff. Then the ventricles don't relax to fill with blood between heartbeats. This condition rarely happens in children.
RCM is often caused by a condition that affects the rest of the body. But in some cases the cause is unknown (idiopathic). RCM doesn't appear to be inherited. But some of the diseases that lead to the condition may be genetic.
Health conditions that may be linked with RCM include:
Radiation therapy for cancer treatment has also been linked with RCM.
The most common symptoms of RCM are:
ARVC is a rare type of inherited cardiomyopathy. It happens if the muscle tissue in the right ventricle has scar tissue. The scar tissue disrupts the heart's electrical system. This causes arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats). ARVC usually affects teens and young adults. Symptoms include heart palpitations and fainting after physical activity. It can cause sudden cardiac arrest in young athletes. Diagnosis typically needs a cardiac MRI.
Treatment often includes: