Background: Acute myocarditis is one of the most challenging diagnoses in cardiology. It is a disease with variable clinical presentation, progression and outcome.
Aim: To assess clinical characteristics and outcome of patients hospitalised with diagnosis of acute myocarditis from year 2006 to 2008.
Methods: We analysed hospital files of consecutive 32 patients admitted to our hospital due to myocarditis. All demographic, clinical and laboratory data were analysed and compared between patients with acute or subacute myocarditis. After discharge the patients were followed for 8-24 months.
Results: The majority of patients were males (84%) in a mean age of 33 years. Clinical and echocardiographic parameters improved in 25 (78%) of patients during hospital stay. During follow-up decreased left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was observed more often in patients with subacute than acute myocarditis (mean LVEF values of 49 vs. 61%, respectively). Patients with a subacute form of the disease more frequently required chronic pharmacological therapy and more often retired from occupational activities.
Conclusions: Diagnosis of myocarditis is still challenging. Careful history taking, serial laboratory, ECG and echocardiographic examinations are helpful in therapeutic decisions making and assessing prognosis. Patient with subacute myocarditis are more symptomatic than patients with acute myocarditis.