Myocarditis (Viral)

Overview


Plain-Language Overview

Myocarditis (Viral) is an inflammation of the heart muscle caused by a viral infection. It affects the heart, which is responsible for pumping blood throughout the body. This condition can lead to symptoms like chest pain, fatigue, and difficulty breathing due to the heart's reduced ability to pump effectively. The inflammation can damage the heart muscle cells, sometimes causing irregular heartbeats or heart failure. Common viruses that cause this include Coxsackievirus and adenovirus. Early recognition is important because the severity can range from mild to life-threatening. The condition primarily impacts the cardiovascular system and overall heart function.

Clinical Definition

Myocarditis (Viral) is defined as inflammation of the myocardium, the muscular layer of the heart wall, typically caused by direct viral infection and subsequent immune-mediated injury. The core pathology involves myocyte necrosis and infiltration by inflammatory cells, predominantly lymphocytes. Common causative agents include enteroviruses such as Coxsackievirus B, adenovirus, and less commonly parvovirus B19. The condition can lead to acute heart failure, arrhythmias, and dilated cardiomyopathy if unresolved. Diagnosis is clinically significant due to its potential to cause sudden cardiac death or chronic cardiac dysfunction. The inflammatory process disrupts normal electrical conduction and contractility, impairing cardiac output. Histopathology often reveals lymphocytic infiltration and myocyte damage, which are hallmarks of viral myocarditis.

Clinical Presentation


Diagnostic Workup


Pathophysiology


Treatments


Prevention


Outcome & Complications


Differential Diagnoses


Medical Disclaimer: The content on this site is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you think you may be experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately. Always consult a licensed healthcare professional with questions about a medical condition.

Artificial Intelligence Use: Portions of this site’s content were generated or assisted by AI and reviewed by Erik Romano, MD; however, errors or omissions may occur.

Analytics Disclosure: If you allow analytics cookies, Doctogenic uses Google Analytics, Microsoft Application Insights, and Microsoft Clarity to understand site usage, diagnose issues, review heatmaps and session replay recordings, and improve the service on pages where those tools are enabled. Clarity is not enabled on account, purchase, billing, checkout, Stripe-related, or admin pages. You can change this choice through Cookie preferences.

USMLE® is a registered trademark of the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) and the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME). Doctogenic and Roscoe & Romano are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by the USMLE, FSMB, or NBME. Neither FSMB nor NBME has reviewed or approved this content. "USMLE Step 1" and "USMLE Step 2 CK" are used only to identify the relevant examinations.