For The Latest Medical News, Health News, Research News, COVID-19 News, Pharma News, Glaucoma News, Diabetes News, Herb News, Phytochemical News, Thailand Cannabis News, Cancer News, Doctor News, Thailand Hospital News, Oral Cancer News, Thailand Doctors
Cardiomyopathy is a disease of the heart muscles which may cause them to become enlarged and inflamed. Inflamed muscles become stretched, weak, less efficient at pumping blood and less able to maintain a normal electrical pattern. This can eventually lead to heart failure. While patients with mild cardiomyopathy may lead a near-normal life, those with severe heart failure may require a heart transplant to survive.
There are four major factors that predispose to cardiomyopathy. These include:
Two examples of the main types of cardiomyopathy are:
This is the most common form of cardiomyopathy and usually develops before the age of 60. In dilated cardiomyopathy, the ventricles and atria become dilated, stretched and thin, which creates enlarged heart chambers that do not contract properly. The heart cannot pump blood efficiently and it becomes weaker. Eventually, the heart may fail which causes symptoms such as tiredness, shortness of breath and fluid retention in the lower limbs and abdomen.
This is the most common cause of sudden cardiac arrest. The condition describes a thickening of the ventricular walls that may prevent blood flow out of the ventricle. The heart compensates for this blockage by pumping harder.
Mild cardiomyopathy often does not give rise to symptoms. In more severe cases, however, heart failure may develop and cause the following:
A diagnosis of cardiomopathy is based on various tests including:
There are several treatments available to treat cardiomyopathy which include: