Inflammation is your body’s response to infection or injury. Ongoing inflammation can cause many serious health problems.
When it affects your heart muscle, it’s called myocarditis.
Myocarditis can affect small or large sections of the heart muscle. Severe cases may cause abnormal heart rhythms or make it harder for the heart to pump blood. That can lead to heart failure.
Symptoms of myocarditis can include chest pain, fast or abnormal heartbeat, shortness of breath, and swelling in your feet or legs.
Viral infections are a common cause of myocarditis. Other infections can also cause the condition. These include bacteria, fungi, or parasites.
Myocarditis may also be a part of an autoimmune disease. This happens when your body’s disease fighting system, called the immune system, mistakenly attacks and destroys your own cells.
Certain medications can also put you at risk for myocarditis.
A health care provider can diagnose the disease with a physical exam, blood tests, and tests of your heart function. The cause of the disease will determine your treatment.
Mild cases of myocarditis might only require rest, close monitoring, and follow-ups with the doctor. More severe cases may need medication.
If you’re diagnosed with heart inflammation, it’s important to follow your treatment plan and receive follow-up care. Talk to your health care provider if you have any concerns about your heart health.
If you care about heart failure, please read studies about a big cause of heart failure, and Aspirin is linked to higher risk of heart failure.
For more information about heart health, please see recent studies that drinking coffee may help reduce heart failure risk, and results showing this common health issue in middle-age may predict heart failure later in life.