Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Health»Cardiac Ultrasounds Show Damaging Impact of COVID-19 on the Heart
    Health

    Cardiac Ultrasounds Show Damaging Impact of COVID-19 on the Heart

    By Mount Sinai School of MedicineOctober 26, 2020No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit
    COVID-19 Myocardial Injury Mortality
    Kaplan-Meier curves for all-cause mortality in patients with versus without myocardial injury (Panel A) and in patients with versus without myocardial injury according to the presence or absence of major echocardiographic abnormalities (Panel B). *Includes wall motion abnormalities, global left ventricular dysfunction, diastolic dysfunction, right ventricular dysfunction and presence of pericardial effusion. Event rates are censored at 20 days from hospital admission. Credit: Mount Sinai Health System

    Cardiac ultrasounds (also known as echocardiograms) are providing a view of the heart and the impact of the COVID-19 virus on patients.

    A new study by researchers at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai identifies different types of cardiac structural damage experienced by COVID-19 patients after cardiac injury that can be associated with deadly conditions including heart attack, pulmonary embolism, heart failure, and myocarditis. These abnormalities are associated with higher risk of death among hospitalized patients. The findings, published in the October 26, 2020, issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, offer new insights that may help doctors better understand the mechanism of cardiac injury, leading to quicker identification of patients at risk and guidance on future therapies.

    “Early detection of structural abnormalities may dictate more appropriate treatments, including anticoagulation and other approaches for hospitalized and post-hospitalized patients,” says author Valentin Fuster, MD, PhD, Director of Mount Sinai Heart and Physician-in-Chief of The Mount Sinai Hospital.

    The international, retrospective study expands on Mount Sinai’s previous research showing that myocardial injury (heart damage) is prevalent among patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and is associated with higher risk of mortality. That study focused on the patients’ levels of troponin — proteins that are released when the heart muscle becomes damaged — and their outcomes (higher troponin levels mean greater heart damage).

    COVID-19 Spectrum of Echocardiographic Abnormalities
    Among patients with Covid-19 who underwent TTE, cardiac structural abnormalities were present in nearly two-thirds of patients with myocardial injury. Cardiac structural abnormalities included right ventricular dysfunction, left ventricular wall motion abnormalities, global left ventricular dysfunction, diastolic dysfunction and pericardial effusions. LV = Left Ventricular. Credit: Mount Sinai Health System

    This new work looked at the presence of cardiac troponin elevations in combination with the presence of echocardiographic abnormalities, and found that the combination was associated with worse prognosis and mortality than troponin elevations alone.

    “This is one of the first studies to provide detailed echocardiographic and electrocardiographic data in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and laboratory evidence of myocardial injury,” explains first and corresponding author Gennaro Giustino, MD, Cardiology Fellow at The Mount Sinai Hospital. “We found that among COVID-19 patients who underwent transthoracic echocardiography, these cardiac structural abnormalities were diverse and present in nearly two-thirds of patients.”

    Researchers looked at transthoracic echocardiographic (TTE) and electrocardiographic (ECG) scans of 305 adult patients with confirmed positive COVID-19 admitted to four New York City hospitals within the Mount Sinai Health System (The Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai West, Mount Sinai Queens, and Mount Sinai Beth Israel), Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, and two hospitals in Milan, Italy, between March and May 2020. Median age was 63 years and 67.2 percent were men. 190 patients (62.6 percent) had evidence of myocardial injury; 118 of them had heart damage at the time of hospitalization admission and 72 developed myocardial injury during hospitalization. Researchers found that patients with myocardial injury had more electrocardiographic abnormalities, higher inflammatory biomarkers, and an increased prevalence of TTE abnormalities when compared to patients without heart injury.

    Abnormalities were diverse, with some patients exhibiting multiple abnormalities. 26.3 percent had right ventricular dysfunction (which can be associated with pulmonary embolism and severe respiratory failure), 23.7 percent had regional left ventricular wall motion abnormalities (which can be associated with heart attacks), 18.4 percent had diffuse left ventricular dysfunction (which can be associated with heart failure/myocarditis), 13.2 percent had grade II or III diastolic dysfunction (a condition leading to stiffer cardiac chambers), and 7.2 percent had pericardial effusions (extra fluid around the heart that causes abnormal pumping of the heart).

    The study went on to look at in-hospital mortality and troponin elevation. It shows that troponin elevation was 5.2 percent among patients who did not have heart injury, compared to 18.6 percent for patients with myocardial injury but without echocardiographic abnormalities, and 31.7 percent for patients with myocardial injury who also had echocardiographic abnormalities. Researchers adjusted for other major complications from COVID-19 including shock, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and renal failure.

    “Our study shows that an echocardiogram performed with appropriate personal protection considerations is a useful and important tool in early identification of patients at greater risk for COVID-19-related cardiac injury, who may benefit from a more aggressive therapeutic approach earlier in their hospitalization,” says corresponding author Martin Goldman, MD, Arthur M. and Hilda A. Master Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “Additionally, because this is a new disease with lingering symptoms, we plan on following these patients closely using imaging to evaluate the evolution and hopefully resolution of these cardiac issues.”

    “Echocardiograms have shown to be invaluable in providing critical information on patients who present with multiple cardiac complaints. Echocardiography is the only imaging modality that can be taken to the bedside and safely used for patients including those on ventilators,” says Lori Croft, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Director of the Echocardiography Laboratory at The Mount Sinai Hospital. “Our findings will help guide care of Covid-19 patients during a critical time.”

    Reference: “Characterization of Myocardial Injury in Patients With COVID-19” by Gennaro Giustino, Lori B. Croft, Giulio G. Stefanini, Renato Bragato, Jeffrey J. Silbiger, Marco Vicenzi, Tatyana Danilov, Nina Kukar, Nada Shaban, Annapoorna Kini, Anton Camaj, Solomon W. Bienstock, Eman R. Rashed, Karishma Rahman, Connor P. Oates, Samantha Buckley, Lindsay S. Elbaum, Derya Arkonac, Ryan Fiter, Ranbir Singh, Emily Li, Victor Razuk, Sam E. Robinson, Michael Miller, Benjamin Bier, Valeria Donghi, Marco Pisaniello, Riccardo Mantovani, Giuseppe Pinto, Irene Rota, Sara Baggio, Mauro Chiarito, Fabio Fazzari, Ignazio Cusmano, Mirko Curzi, Richard Ro, Waqas Malick, Mazullah Kamran, Roopa Kohli-Seth, Adel M. Bassily-Marcus, Eric Neibart, Gregory Serrao, Gila Perk, Donna Mancini, Vivek Y. Reddy, Sean P. Pinney, George Dangas, Francesco Blasi, Samin K. Sharma, Roxana Mehran, Gianluigi Condorelli, Gregg W. Stone, Valentin Fuster, Stamatios Lerakis and Martin E. Goldman, 26 October 2020, Journal of American College of Cardiology.
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.08.069

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Follow us on Google and Google News.

    Cardiology COVID-19 Heart Infectious Diseases Mount Sinai Health System Mount Sinai School of Medicine Popular
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    The Invisible Assault: How COVID-19 Clandestinely Ravages the Heart

    Heart Attack Alert: COVID-19’s Direct Assault on Coronary Arteries

    Long COVID Sufferers More Than Twice As Likely To Experience Heart Problems

    COVID-19 Vaccination Linked to Fewer Heart Attacks, Strokes, and Other Cardiovascular Issues

    COVID Spike Protein Binds to Heart’s Vascular Cells – May Contribute to Severe Microvascular Damage

    COVID-19 Infections Increase Risk of Serious Heart Conditions Up to a Year Later

    Heart Damage Found in More Than Half of COVID-19 Patients Discharged From Hospital

    Researchers May Have Discovered the True Cause of Low Oxygen Levels in Severe Cases of COVID-19

    Doctors Shocked by Heart Damage in COVID-19 Patients – Unique Pattern of Cell Death Revealed by Autopsies

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    AI Could Detect Early Signs of Alzheimer’s in Under a Minute – Far Before Traditional Tests

    What if Dark Matter Has Two Forms? Bold New Hypothesis Could Explain a Cosmic Mystery

    This Metal Melts in Your Hand – and Scientists Just Discovered Something Strange

    Beef vs. Chicken: Surprising Results From New Prediabetes Study

    Alzheimer’s Breakthrough: Scientists Discover Key Protein May Prevent Toxic Protein Clumps in the Brain

    Quantum Reality Gets Stranger: Physicists Put a Lump of Metal in Two Places at Once

    Scientists May Have Found the Key to Jupiter and Saturn’s Moon Mystery

    Scientists Uncover Brain Changes That Link Pain to Depression

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • Living With Roommates Might Be Changing Your Gut Microbiome Without You Knowing
    • Simple and Cheap Blood Test Could Detect Cancer and Other Diseases Before Symptoms Appear
    • Century-Old Cleaning Chemical Linked to 500% Increased Risk of Parkinson’s Disease
    • What if Your Memories Never Happened? Physicists Take a New Look at the Boltzmann Brain Paradox
    • Students Found an Ancient Star That Shouldn’t Be in the Milky Way
    Copyright © 1998 - 2026 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.