Abstract

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is defined as inappropriate ventricular hypertrophy without a cardiac or systemic cause. On the other hand, hepatitis C virus (HCV) causes extrahepatic manifestations as well as chronic persistent infection in hepatocytes. We studied the association of HCV infection with HCM, comparing the prevalence of HCV antibodies between HCM patients and age- and gender-matched controls with other cardiovascular diseases at a single institution, for reasons of exclusion of bias. We then described the clinical features and genotype analysis of HCV RNA in HCM. The diagnosis of HCM was established by echocardiographic demonstration of a hypertrophied (> or =15 mm), nondilated left ventricle in the absence of another systemic or cardiovascular disease capable of producing the magnitude of hypertrophy observed. The study population consisted of 80 patients with HCM, in whom HCV antibody was examined (55 men and 25 women; mean age 56.6 +/- 12.4 years; ranging from 19 to 80 years), compared with a total of 80 age- and gender-matched controls without HCM. The prevalence of HCV infection in patients with HCM (18/80) was significantly higher than in control subjects (5/80) (Chi(2) = 7.312, P = 0.007). Of the 12 patients in whom the genotype of HCV was analyzed, 7 had type 1b and 5 had type 2a. The prevalence of HCV infection was higher in patients with HCM than in age- and gender-matched control subjects with other cardiovascular diseases. The result suggests that HCV may play an important role in these HCV-positive HCM patients.

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