TY - JOUR
T1 - Eosinophilic Infiltration of the Sino-Atrial Node in Sudden Cardiac Death Caused by Long QT Syndrome
AU - Grassi, Simone
AU - Campuzano, Oscar
AU - Coll, Mònica
AU - Cazzato, Francesca
AU - Iglesias, Anna
AU - Ausania, Francesco
AU - Scarnicci, Francesca
AU - Sarquella-Brugada, Georgia
AU - Brugada, Josep
AU - Arena, Vincenzo
AU - Oliva, Antonio
AU - Brugada, Ramon
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - : Sudden death is defined as the unexpected death of a healthy person that occurs within the first hour of the onset of symptoms or within 24 h of the victim being last seen alive. In some of these cases, rare deleterious variants of genes associated with inherited cardiac disorders can provide a highly probable explanation for the fatal event. We report the case of a 21-year-old obese woman who lost consciousness suddenly in a public place and was pronounced dead after hospital admission. Clinical autopsy showed an inconclusive gross examination, while in the histopathological analysis an eosinophilic inflammatory focus and interstitial fibrosis in the sino-atrial node were found. Molecular autopsy revealed an intronic variant in the KCNQ1 gene (c.683 + 5G > A), classified as likely pathogenic for long QT syndrome according to the guidelines provided by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. Therefore, there were many anomalies that could have played a role in the causation of the sudden death, such as the extreme obesity, the cardiac anomalies and the KNCQ1 variant. This case depicts the difficult interpretation of rare cardiac structural abnormalities in subjects carrying rare variants responsible for inherited arrhythmic disorders and the challenge for the forensic pathologist to make causal inferences in the determinism of the unexpected decease.
AB - : Sudden death is defined as the unexpected death of a healthy person that occurs within the first hour of the onset of symptoms or within 24 h of the victim being last seen alive. In some of these cases, rare deleterious variants of genes associated with inherited cardiac disorders can provide a highly probable explanation for the fatal event. We report the case of a 21-year-old obese woman who lost consciousness suddenly in a public place and was pronounced dead after hospital admission. Clinical autopsy showed an inconclusive gross examination, while in the histopathological analysis an eosinophilic inflammatory focus and interstitial fibrosis in the sino-atrial node were found. Molecular autopsy revealed an intronic variant in the KCNQ1 gene (c.683 + 5G > A), classified as likely pathogenic for long QT syndrome according to the guidelines provided by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. Therefore, there were many anomalies that could have played a role in the causation of the sudden death, such as the extreme obesity, the cardiac anomalies and the KNCQ1 variant. This case depicts the difficult interpretation of rare cardiac structural abnormalities in subjects carrying rare variants responsible for inherited arrhythmic disorders and the challenge for the forensic pathologist to make causal inferences in the determinism of the unexpected decease.
KW - eosinophilic inflammatory focus
KW - forensic autopsy
KW - post-mortem genetic testing
KW - sino-atrial node
KW - sudden cardiac death
KW - eosinophilic inflammatory focus
KW - forensic autopsy
KW - post-mortem genetic testing
KW - sino-atrial node
KW - sudden cardiac death
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/227954
U2 - 10.3390/ijms231911666
DO - 10.3390/ijms231911666
M3 - Article
SN - 1661-6596
VL - 23
SP - 11666
EP - 11999
JO - International Journal of Molecular Sciences
JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences
ER -