Posted By ronnie, on August 24, 1998 at 00:57:00:
In Reply to: Re: Need information posted by CCF CARDIO MD - CRC on August 23, 1998 at 18:44:24:
: thanks for the information. Yes I have had an echocardiogam and am waithing for another to check heart progress. Also have had a heart biopsy..down the side of the
neckCervical spondylosis
Head and neck glands
Herpes zoster (shingles) on the neck and cheek
Irritated seborrheic kerotosis - neck
Lymph tissue in the head and neck.
Melanoma - neck
Neck lump
Neck pain
Neck pulse
Neck x-ray
Oral cancer..which did hurt after Dr sayinng it wouldn't..Are chest pains okay?
_______
Dear ronnie,
Thank you for your question. It seems that we have been getting a lot of questions from young people with cardiomyopathy lately and you can read through those and also get information from them. Basically cardiomyopathy is a "
weaknessWeakness" of the heart muscle that can be due to
ischemiaHepatic ischemia
Ischemic colitis
Mesenteric artery ischemia
Testicular torsion
Vertebrobasilar circulatory disorders (lack of blood flow - the most
commonCommon cold), viral (more
commonCommon cold in young people),
idiopathicBell's palsy
Fibrous dysplasia
Guillain-barre syndrome
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Idiopathic aplastic anemia
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
Orbital pseudotumor
Pseudotumor cerebri (unknown cause but probably viral) and several rare conditions. It is usually diagnosed by history and an echocardiogram. Occasionally a heart muscle biopsy is performed.
Symptoms are shortness of breath, swelling in the legs, chest discomfort and palpitations and increased fatigue. Treatment is usually medical and in severe cases heart transplant. About a third of patients get worse with some going on to transplant. Another third stay the same and are managed well with medical therapy and the rest get better. Hope this helps. Feel free to write back with any additional questions.
Information provided here is for general educational purposes only. Only your doctor can provide specific diagnoses and treatments. If you would like to be seen at the Cleveland Clinic, please call 1-800-CCF-CARE for an appointment at Desk F15 with a cardiologist.