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Circulation, Vol 57, 816-823, Copyright © 1978 by American Heart Association
TN James, RC Schlant and TK Marshall
Most focally destructive lesions of the heart (e.g., myocarditis) have an
essentially random distribution. Any mechanical significance of such
diseases depends primarily on there being a very large number of foci.
However, single even very small lesions can have profound
electrophysiological significance if appropriately located within the
cardiac conduction system. Two cases of sudden unexpected death are here
reported which had destructive lesions involving the His bundle and a
narrow-origin left bundle branch. Not much is known of the electrical or
mechanical effects of acute left branch block which is due to complete
anatomical transection of that structure in the human heart, and some
possible consequences (including sudden unexpected death) are considered.
Myocarditis or any other focally destructive disease in the heart may be of
little functional importance if it is not widespread, unless some of the
lesions happen to damage any of several small but crucially important sites
in the cardiac conduction system. Studies to determine the presence or
absence of this precise type of damage should be done especially in cases
of sudden unexpected death.
ARTICLES
De subitaneis mortibus. XXIX. Randomly distributed focal myocardial lesions causing destruction in the His bundle or a narrow-origin left bundle branch
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