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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Idiopathic multifocal myocardial atrophy with fibrosis and fatty infiltration involving Purkinje fibres in a 13-year-old Arabian broodmare: Histopathological features.

Journal:
Veterinary medicine and science
Year:
2021
Authors:
Goto Asakawa, Midori et al.
Affiliation:
Clinical and Anatomic Pathology Unit · Japan
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 13-year-old Arabian broodmare suddenly died while in her paddock, and an autopsy revealed some unusual heart issues. The examination showed that parts of her heart muscle were shrinking and being replaced by scar tissue and fat, particularly affecting the areas that help control heartbeats. This condition, known as myocardial atrophy (shrinkage of heart muscle), seemed to be a response to some kind of injury, but there were no signs of common heart diseases that usually cause these changes. Unfortunately, this rare heart condition can lead to quick health decline and death.

Abstract

Myocardial atrophy with fibrosis and fatty infiltration involving the cardiac conduction system is relatively unusual in horses. We herein report of such a case in a 13-year-old Arabian broodmare that had spontaneously died on a paddock. An autopsy revealed multifocal myocardial atrophy with concomitant fibrosis and fatty infiltration in both the ventricles and interventricular septum. The Purkinje fibres in the ventricles and interventricular septum were surrounded by thick fibrous or adipose tissues adjacent to atrophic myocardial cells. Myocardial fibrosis and fatty infiltration were likely secondary to myocardial atrophy, occurring as a pathological response triggered by the repair of muscular wall injury. However, there were no major vascular pathologies (e.g. atherosclerosis and arteriosclerosis); hence, the pathogenesis of myocardial atrophy was unclear. There was no evidence of myocardial atrophy ̵ induced pathologies such as infarct, ischaemic lesions, myocardial degeneration, myocarditis and endocarditis. However, such an unusual histopathological pattern may be associated with rapid clinical deterioration and death.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32940417/