Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (May 2021)

Case Reports: Emery-Dreifuss Muscular Dystrophy Presenting as a Heart Rhythm Disorders in Children

  • Tatiana Kovalchuk,
  • Elena Yakovleva,
  • Svetlana Fetisova,
  • Tatiana Vershinina,
  • Viktoriya Lebedeva,
  • Tamara Lyubimtseva,
  • Dmitriy Lebedev,
  • Lubov Mitrofanova,
  • Anton Ryzhkov,
  • Polina Sokolnikova,
  • Yuliya Fomicheva,
  • Alexandra Kozyreva,
  • Sergey Zhuk,
  • Natalia Smolina,
  • Anna Zlotina,
  • Tatiana Pervunina,
  • Anna Kostareva,
  • Anna Kostareva,
  • Elena Vasichkina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2021.668231
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) is inherited muscle dystrophy often accompanied by cardiac abnormalities in the form of supraventricular arrhythmias, conduction defects and sinus node dysfunction. Cardiac phenotype typically arises years after skeletal muscle presentation, though, could be severe and life-threatening. The defined clinical manifestation with joint contractures, progressive muscle weakness and atrophy, as well as cardiac symptoms are observed by the third decade of life. Still, clinical course and sequence of muscle and cardiac signs may be variable and depends on the genotype. Cardiac abnormalities in patients with EDMD in pediatric age are not commonly seen. Here we describe five patients with different forms of EDMD (X-linked and autosomal-dominant) caused by the mutations in EMD and LMNA genes, presented with early onset of cardiac abnormalities and no prominent skeletal muscle phenotype. The predominant forms of cardiac pathology were atrial arrhythmias and conduction disturbances that progress over time. The presented cases discussed in the light of therapeutic strategy, including radiofrequency ablation and antiarrhythmic devices implantation, and the importance of thorough neurological and genetic screening in pediatric patients presenting with complex heart rhythm disorders.

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