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      Insights into the clinical and functional significance of cardiac autonomic dysfunction in Chagas disease Translated title: Considerações sobre o significado clínico-funcional da disfunção autonômica cardíaca na doença de Chagas

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          Abstract

          INTRODUCTION: Exclusive or associated lesions in various structures of the autonomic nervous system occur in the chronic forms of Chagas disease. In the indeterminate form, the lesions are absent or mild, whereas in the exclusive or combined heart and digestive disease forms, they are often more pronounced. Depending on their severity these lesions can result mainly in cardiac parasympathetic dysfunction but also in sympathetic dysfunction of variable degrees. Despite the key autonomic effect on cardiovascular functioning, the pathophysiological and clinical significance of the cardiac autonomic dysfunction in Chagas disease remains unknown. METHODS: Review of data on the cardiac autonomic dysfunction in Chagas disease and their potential consequences, and considerations supporting the possible relationship between this disturbance and general or cardiovascular clinical and functional adverse outcomes. RESULTS: We hypothesise that possible consequences that cardiac dysautonomia might variably occasion or predispose in Chagas disease include: transient or sustained arrhythmias, sudden cardiac death, adverse overall and cardiovascular prognosis with enhanced morbidity and mortality, an inability of the cardiovascular system to adjust to functional demands and/or respond to internal or external stimuli by adjusting heart rate and other hemodynamic variables, and immunomodulatory and cognitive disturbances. CONCLUSIONS: Impaired cardiac autonomic modulation in Chagas disease might not be a mere epiphenomenon without significance. Indirect evidences point for a likely important role of this alteration as a primary predisposing or triggering cause or mediator favouring the development of subtle or evident secondary cardiovascular functional disturbances and clinical consequences, and influencing adverse outcomes.

          Translated abstract

          INTRODUÇÃO: Lesões isoladas ou combinadas de várias estruturas do sistema nervoso autônomo ocorrem nas formas crônicas da doença de Chagas. Na forma indeterminada, as lesões são discretas e podem estar até ausentes, enquanto nas formas cardíaca e digestória exclusivas ou combinadas elas são comumente mais pronunciadas. Na dependência da sua maior ou menor severidade, estas lesões podem resultar em variáveis graus de disfunção parassimpática e/ou simpática, principalmente a primeira. Apesar da crítica influência autonômica sobre o funcionamento cardiovascular, o significado fisiopatológico e clínico, notadamente em longo prazo, da disfunção autonômica cardíaca permanece desconhecido na doença de Chagas. MÉTODOS: Revisão sobre a disfunção autonômica cardíaca na doença de Chagas e suas potenciais consequências, como base para considerações acerca da possível relação entre este distúrbio e desfechos clínicos e funcionais globais e cardiovasculares desfavoráveis. RESULTADOS: Os potenciais desfechos que a disautonomia cardíaca pode variavelmente determinar ou predispor na doença de Chagas incluem: arritmias transitórias ou sustentadas, morte súbita, mal prognóstico global e cardiovascular, morbi-mortalidade aumentada, deficiente adaptação cardiovascular a demandas funcionais e/ou em resposta a estímulos internos e externos por meio de ajustes da frequência cardíaca e outras variáveis hemodinâmicas, e distúrbios imunomoduladores e psico-funcionais. CONCLUSÕES: A alteração da modulação autonômica cardíaca na doença de Chagas pode não representar mero epifenômeno sem significado. Evidências indiretas sugerem papel importante desta alteração como fator predisponente ou determinante primário para o desenvolvimento secundário de distúrbios funcionais manifestos ou não e consequências clínicas cardiovasculares, e para a ocorrência de desfechos desfavoráveis.

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          Most cited references100

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          Clinical and epidemiological aspects of Chagas disease.

          A. Prata (2001)
          Chagas disease is caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. During the past decades, after urban migrations, Chagas disease became frequent in cities and a health problem in non-endemic countries, where it can be transmitted vertically and by blood transfusion or organ transplantation. Microepidemics of acute Chagas disease have been reported, probably due to oral transmission. Heart involvement is the major feature of the disease because of its characteristics, frequency, and consequences, and is also the source of most controversies. The indeterminate clinical form, despite its good prognosis on at least a medium-term basis (5-10 years), has acquired increasing importance due to the controversial meaning of the abnormality of some tests and the myocardial focal lesions found in many patients. Simultaneous evaluation of the parasympathetic and of the sympathetic system in the heart has been done by spectral analysis of heart rate. The physiopathological and clinical significance of denervation in Chagas disease is still incompletely understood. There are major divergences of opinion on specific treatment during the chronic phase because of the doubts about cure rates. Changes of Chagas disease prevalence in many countries have been certified by the Pan American Health Organization, and are ascribed to large-scale vector-control programmes with modern pyrethroid insecticides and to improvement in lifestyle.
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            Pathogenesis of chronic Chagas heart disease.

            Chagas disease remains a significant public health issue and a major cause of morbidity and mortality in Latin America. Despite nearly 1 century of research, the pathogenesis of chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy is incompletely understood, the most intriguing challenge of which is the complex host-parasite interaction. A systematic review of the literature found in MEDLINE, EMBASE, BIREME, LILACS, and SCIELO was performed to search for relevant references on pathogenesis and pathophysiology of Chagas disease. Evidence from studies in animal models and in anima nobile points to 4 main pathogenetic mechanisms to explain the development of chronic Chagas heart disease: autonomic nervous system derangements, microvascular disturbances, parasite-dependent myocardial aggression, and immune-mediated myocardial injury. Despite its prominent peculiarities, the role of autonomic derangements and microcirculatory disturbances is probably ancillary among causes of chronic myocardial damage. The pathogenesis of chronic Chagas heart disease is dependent on a low-grade but incessant systemic infection with documented immune-adverse reaction. Parasite persistence and immunological mechanisms are inextricably related in the myocardial aggression in the chronic phase of Chagas heart disease. Most clinical studies have been performed in very small number of patients. Future research should explore the clinical potential implications and therapeutic opportunities of these 2 fundamental underlying pathogenetic mechanisms.
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              Development and validation of a risk score for predicting death in Chagas' heart disease.

              Chagas' disease is an important health problem in Latin America, and cardiac involvement is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. We developed a model to predict the risk of death in patients with Chagas' heart disease. We retrospectively evaluated 424 outpatients from a regional Brazilian cohort. The association of potential risk factors with death was tested by Cox proportional-hazards analysis, and a risk score was created. The model was validated in 153 patients from a separate community hospital. During a mean follow-up of 7.9 years, 130 patients in the development cohort died. Six independent prognostic factors were identified, and each was assigned a number of points proportional to its regression coefficient: New York Heart Association class III or IV (5 points), evidence of cardiomegaly on radiography (5 points), left ventricular systolic dysfunction on echocardiography (3 points), nonsustained ventricular tachycardia on 24-hour Holter monitoring (3 points), low QRS voltage on electrocardiography (2 points), and male sex (2 points). We calculated risk scores for each patient and defined three risk groups: low risk (0 to 6 points), intermediate risk (7 to 11 points), and high risk (12 to 20 points). In the development cohort, the 10-year mortality rates for these three groups were 10 percent, 44 percent, and 84 percent, respectively. In the validation cohort, the corresponding mortality rates were 9 percent, 37 percent, and 85 percent. The C statistic for the point system was 0.84 in the development cohort and 0.81 in the validation cohort. A simple risk score was developed to predict death in Chagas' heart disease and was validated in an independent cohort. Copyright 2006 Massachusetts Medical Society.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                rsbmt
                Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical
                Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop.
                Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical - SBMT (Uberaba, MG, Brazil )
                0037-8682
                1678-9849
                April 2012
                : 45
                : 2
                : 243-252
                Affiliations
                [01] Brasilia DF orgnameUniversidade de Brasilia orgdiv1Área de Clínica Médica (Cardiologia) orgdiv2Laboratório Cardiovascular
                Article
                S0037-86822012000200020 S0037-8682(12)04500200020
                a560968d-33b0-4a3c-9153-5f9df1229ec2

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 17 October 2011
                : 10 January 2012
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 100, Pages: 10
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Review Article

                Cardiac autonomic dysfunction,Cardiovascular outcomes,Cardiopatia chagásica crônica,Forma indeterminada da doença de Chagas,Função autonômica cardíaca,Disautonomia cardíaca,Desfechos cardiovasculares,Chagas heart disease,Indeterminate form of Chagas disease,Heart autonomic control

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