Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an inherited myocardial disease at risk of sudden cardiac death and heart failure, even requiring heart transplantation. A "muscular mitral-aortic disconti-nuity" has been reported during surgery in the obstructive form. We aimed to validate these findings through pathological analysis of HCM heart specimens from the cardiovascular pathology tissue registry. Hearts with septal asymmetric HCM from sudden cardiac death, other causes of death, or heart transplantation were included. Sex-matched and age-matched patients without HCM served as controls. Gross and histologic analysis of the mitral valve (MV) apparatus and the mitral-aortic continuity were performed. Thirty HCM hearts (median age, 29.5 years; 15 men) and 30 controls (median age, 30.5 years; 15 men) were studied. In HCM hearts, a septal bulging was present in 80%, an endocardial fibrous plaque in 63%, a thickening of the anterior MV leaflet in 56.7%, and an anomalous insertion of papillary muscle in 10%. All cases but 1 (97%) revealed a myocardial layer overlapping the mitral-aortic fibrous continuity on the posterior side, corre-sponding to the left atrial myocardium. A negative correlation between the length of this myocardial layer and the age and the anterior MV leaflet length was found. The length did not differ between HCM and controls. Pathologic study of obstructive HCM hearts does not confirm the existence of a "muscular mitral-aortic discontinuity". An extension of left atrial myocardium, overlapping posteriorly the inter -valvular fibrosa, is rather visible, and its length decreases with age, possibly as a consequence of left atrial remodeling. Our study highlights the fundamental role of thorough gross examination and the value of organ retention for further analysis in order to validate new surgical and imaging findings. & COPY; 2023 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Is Congenital Muscular Mitral-Aortic Discontinuity Another Feature of Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy? A Pathology Validation Study

De Gaspari, Monica;Angelini, Annalisa;Perazzolo Marra, Martina;Pilichou, Kalliopi;Corrado, Domenico;Rizzo, Stefania;Basso, Cristina
2023

Abstract

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an inherited myocardial disease at risk of sudden cardiac death and heart failure, even requiring heart transplantation. A "muscular mitral-aortic disconti-nuity" has been reported during surgery in the obstructive form. We aimed to validate these findings through pathological analysis of HCM heart specimens from the cardiovascular pathology tissue registry. Hearts with septal asymmetric HCM from sudden cardiac death, other causes of death, or heart transplantation were included. Sex-matched and age-matched patients without HCM served as controls. Gross and histologic analysis of the mitral valve (MV) apparatus and the mitral-aortic continuity were performed. Thirty HCM hearts (median age, 29.5 years; 15 men) and 30 controls (median age, 30.5 years; 15 men) were studied. In HCM hearts, a septal bulging was present in 80%, an endocardial fibrous plaque in 63%, a thickening of the anterior MV leaflet in 56.7%, and an anomalous insertion of papillary muscle in 10%. All cases but 1 (97%) revealed a myocardial layer overlapping the mitral-aortic fibrous continuity on the posterior side, corre-sponding to the left atrial myocardium. A negative correlation between the length of this myocardial layer and the age and the anterior MV leaflet length was found. The length did not differ between HCM and controls. Pathologic study of obstructive HCM hearts does not confirm the existence of a "muscular mitral-aortic discontinuity". An extension of left atrial myocardium, overlapping posteriorly the inter -valvular fibrosa, is rather visible, and its length decreases with age, possibly as a consequence of left atrial remodeling. Our study highlights the fundamental role of thorough gross examination and the value of organ retention for further analysis in order to validate new surgical and imaging findings. & COPY; 2023 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3493661
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