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. 1992 Dec;68(6):586–588. doi: 10.1136/hrt.68.12.586

Myocardial disarray in Noonan syndrome

Michael Burch 1,2, Jessica M Mann 1,2, Michael Sharland 1,2, Elliot A Shinebourne 1,2, Michael A Patton 1,2, William J McKenna 1,2
PMCID: PMC1025689  PMID: 1467053

Abstract

Objective—To characterise the histopathology of the left ventricular hypertrophy commonly associated with Noonan syndrome by assessing the extent of myocyte disarray and therefore to define one aspect of the relation between this disease and idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Design—Blinded histological analysis.

Setting—Hospital medical school.

Patients—Six hearts of children with the Noonan phenotype and isolated ventricular hypertrophy were compared with age and sex matched controls.

Methods—Histological analysis was performed with an image analyser under light microscopy. Representative sections from the entire left ventricular free wall were examined. Results were expressed as the percentage of fields showing disarray related to the number of fields evaluated: 100 fields were examined for each patient.

Results—In the patients with Noonan syndrome myocardial disarray was present in the ventricular septum in 24 (5·7)% (mean (SD)) of fields and in the free wall in 22·2 (6·8)%. In the controls disarray was present in the septum in 3·8 (2·3)% of fields and in the free wall in 2·4 (2·8)%. In both regions the extent of disarray was significantly greater in patients with Noonan syndrome (p < 0·0005; 95% confidence interval 14 to 26·3 for the septum: p < 0·005, 95% confidence interval 11·4 to 28·2 for the free wall).

Conclusions—The ventricular hypertrophy associated with Noonan syndrome is histologically similar to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy but whether the two diseases are the expression of the same genetic defect remains to be determined.

Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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