Prevalence of cardiac fibrosis and infiltrative cardiomyopathy in patients with advanced conduction system disease
Jeremy William, Haider Muthana, Joseph Hogarty, Andrew Taylor, James L. Hare, Justin Mariani, Hitesh Patel, Geoff Wong, Dion Stub, David M. Kaye, Sandeep Prabhu, Peter M. Kistler, Aleksandr Voskoboinik

TL;DR
This study shows that many patients with conduction system disease have hidden heart issues, like fibrosis or sarcoidosis, even when heart function seems normal.
Contribution
The study highlights the value of cardiac MRI in detecting fibrosis and sarcoidosis in conduction system disease patients with normal echocardiograms.
Findings
26.9% of patients had CMR-detected myocardial fibrosis.
Cardiac sarcoid was the most common diagnosis, with many cases previously undetected.
Fibrosis was similarly prevalent across different types of conduction disease.
Abstract
Conduction system disease may represent an early manifestation of underlying structural heart disease, including infiltrative disorders. Timely diagnosis of underlying cardiomyopathy has significant implications for clinical management, guiding both disease‐modifying medical therapy and decisions around device implantation. We sought to investigate the utility of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) in patients with conduction system disease and preserved LV function on echocardiography. We evaluated all patients undergoing CMR between 2005 and 2023 at our institution for the investigation of advanced conduction system disease (complete heart block, Mobitz II block, or bifascicular block). We excluded patients with known systolic heart failure (LVEF<50%) prior to CMR. We evaluated the prevalence of CMR‐detected myocardial fibrosis and infiltrative cardiomyopathy in this cohort.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSarcoidosis and Beryllium Toxicity Research · Viral Infections and Immunology Research · Cardiac Structural Anomalies and Repair
