When the heart gets the flu: Fulminant influenza B myocarditis: A case-series report and review of the literature.

Link to article at PubMed

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When the heart gets the flu: Fulminant influenza B myocarditis: A case-series report and review of the literature.

J Crit Care. 2018 Jun 09;47:61-64

Authors: Hékimian G, Jovanovic T, Bréchot N, Lebreton G, Leprince P, Trouillet JL, Schmidt M, Nieszkowska A, Besset S, Chastre J, Combes A, Luyt CE

Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe patients with refractory cardiogenic shock related to influenza B virus myocarditis rescued by venoarterial Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (VA-ECMO).
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Consecutive patients hospitalized in our unit for influenza-associated myocarditis were prospectively included. We also conducted a systematic MEDLINE database literature review through the PubMed search engine, between 1946 and 2017.
RESULTS: We report the cases of 4 young patients with fulminant myocarditis requiring VA-ECMO for 6 [5-8] days. Influenza B virus was detected in all patients, either in nasopharyngeal sampling or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. The 4 patients received oseltamivir. Heart function recovery allowed ECMO device removal without cardiac sequelae in all 4 patients. Systematic review retrieved 184 cases of influenza-associated myocarditis, most cases associated with H1N1 type-A infection during the 2009 pandemic. Forty eight cases of influenza myocarditis-associated cardiogenic shock requiring mechanical circulatory support including 3 cases due to influenza B virus were described. Mean duration of mechanical circulatory support was 8.5 ± 6 days and mortality rate was 33%.
CONCLUSIONS: Influenza myocarditis is a rare but reversible cause of cardiogenic shock amenable to VA-ECMO rescue. Early antiviral therapy and ECMO support should be considered for patients with fulminant myocarditis during an influenza epidemic.

PMID: 29929152 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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