When the patient started to experience shortness of breath and fainting spells, he consulted a cardiologist. He was diagnosed with (HCM), an inherited condition affecting 1 in 500 people in which the heart muscle thickens, compromising the heart鈥檚 ability to pump blood and beat rhythmically.
All too often, the complications of HCM are overlooked, or the disease itself is misdiagnosed or improperly treated. 鈥淗CM is the great masquerader,鈥 explains , medical director of 好色tv Langone鈥檚 new . With nearly 1,400 patients, the program is one of the largest of its kind in the country. 鈥淚t looks like other cardiac diseases鈥攁nd also noncardiac ones, from exercise-induced asthma to panic attacks. Moreover, the disease affects individuals differently, with a variety of symptoms.鈥 Complicating matters, HCM can strike adolescents and young adults, in whom heart problems are not expected to arise. In the US, it鈥檚 the leading cause of sudden cardiac death among young athletes.
Treatments failed to help the patient, so he visited one cardiologist after another before finally consulting Dr. Sherrid, who asked him a simple question: 鈥淒o your symptoms get worse after eating?鈥 The patient鈥檚 answer was an emphatic yes. Dr. Sherrid suspected that his patient鈥檚 symptoms were due to obstructed blood flow from the left ventricle, a common complication of HCM. He confirmed the diagnosis with an ultrasound technique he had developed in 2013. He then prescribed a medication whose use he had pioneered specifically to help improve ventricular blood flow in patients with HCM. The patient鈥檚 blackouts stopped, and his ability to exercise improved.
Many patients respond well to medication. For those who don鈥檛, there is a surgical option. The program鈥檚 surgical director, cardiac surgeon , has greatly improved a procedure that thins the wall separating the right and left sides of the heart.
鈥淗CM used to be considered a disease with a very poor prognosis and few therapeutic options,鈥 notes Dr. Sherrid. 鈥淣ow, we have methods to eliminate obstruction, alleviate symptoms, and improve quality of life. First-degree family members should be screened for the disease. With appropriate treatment, most patients can expect near-normal life expectancy.鈥