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Carcinoid Heart Disease: Pathophysiology, Pathology, Clinical Manifestations, and Management

Chengyue Jin, Ajay Sharma, Balasingam Thevakumar, Muhammad Majid, Shahad Al Chalaby, Nene Takahashi, Ashraf Tanious, Aro Daniela Arockiam, Neil Beri, Ezra A. Amsterdam

2020Cardiology65 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Carcinoid heart disease (CHD) is a rare and potentially lethal manifestation of an advanced carcinoid (neuroendocrine) tumor. The pathophysiology of CHD is related to vasoactive substances secreted by the tumor, of which serotonin is most prominent in the pathophysiology of CHD. Serotonin stimulates fibroblast growth and fibrogenesis, which can lead to cardiac valvular fibrosis. CHD primarily affects right heart valves, causing tricuspid and pulmonic regurgitation and less frequently stenosis of these valves. Left heart valves are usually spared because vasoactive substances such as serotonin are enzymatically inactivated in the lung vasculature. The pathology of CHD is characterized by plaque-like deposition of fibrous tissue on valvular cusps, leaflets, papillary muscles, chordae, and ventricular walls. Symptomatic CHD usually presents between 50 and 70 years of age, initially as dyspnea and fatigue. Echocardiography is the mainstay of imaging and demonstrates thickened right heart valves with limited mobility and regurgitation. Treatment focuses on control of the underlying carcinoid syndrome, targeting subsequent valvular heart disease and managing consequent heart failure. Surgical valve replacement and catheter-directed valve procedures may be effective for selected patients with CHD.

Topics & Concepts

Carcinoid Heart DiseaseMedicineCarcinoid syndromePathophysiologyCardiologyInternal medicinevalvular heart diseaseHeart valveHeart failurePulmonary valveValve replacementRegurgitation (circulation)Heart diseaseStenosisPathologyNeuroendocrine Tumor Research AdvancesNeuroblastoma Research and TreatmentsLung Cancer Research Studies
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