Arrhythmia and muscular exercise intolerance revealing lamin genetic defect in a young adult

Journal: La Revue De Medecine Interne
Published:
Abstract

Background: Arrhythmic disorders are infrequent in young adult and should evoke myopathy associated cardiomyopathy, even though muscular symptoms are moderate or absent.

Methods: We report a 25-year-old woman who developed severe supraventricular rhythm disturbances with exercise intolerance and elevated serum creatine kinase level. Initially the echocardiography showed normal ventricular function. Mutation in the lamin gene (LMNA) was identified. During the disease course, arrhythmia and ventricular function worsened and required cardioverter defibrillator implantation.

Conclusions: Laminopathies are genetic disorders among which dilated cardiomyopathy associated with skeletal muscular involvement is the most frequent phenotype, usually like Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy. Other phenotypes are progeria, lipodystrophic syndromes and peripheral neuropathy. Cardiac involvement is responsible for syncope, thromboembolic events and sudden death and often requires early cardioverter defibrillator implantation.

Authors
C Jacquet, B Brembilla Perrot, J-m Marc Sellal, S Mohamed, A Terrier De La Chaise, P Kaminsky
Relevant Conditions

Acute Pain