Abstract

Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is a poorly recognized heart disease that was initially regarded as a benign condition. Recently, it has been shown that TTS may be associated with severe clinical complications including death and that its prevalence is probably underestimated. Since current guidelines on TTS are lacking, it appears timely and important to provide an expert consensus statement on TTS. The clinical expert consensus document part I summarizes the current state of knowledge on clinical presentation and characteristics of TTS and agrees on controversies surrounding TTS such as nomenclature, different TTS types, role of coronary artery disease, and etiology. This consensus also proposes new diagnostic criteria based on current knowledge to improve diagnostic accuracy.

Outline

  • History     2033

  • Nomenclature     2033

  • Epidemiology     2034

  • Symptoms and signs     2035

  • Diagnostic criteria     2035

  • Pathophysiology     2036

  •  Sympathetic stimulation     2036

  •  Potential pathophysiological effects of enhanced sympathetic stimulation     2036

  •   Plaque rupture     2036

  •   Multi-vessel epicardial spasm     2036

  •   Microcirculatory dysfunction     2036

  •   Catecholamine toxicity on cardiomyocytes     2037

  •   Activation of myocardial survival pathways     2037

  • Predisposition and risk factors     2038

  •  Hormonal factors     2038

  •  Genetic factors     2038

  •  Psychiatric and neurologic disorders     2038

  • Triggers     2039

  •  Emotional stressors     2039

  •  Physical stressors     2039

  •  Absence of identifiable causes     2039

  • Types of takotsubo syndrome     2039

  • Chronobiology     2042

  • References     2042

History

The term takotsubo syndrome (TTS) was first introduced when Sato et al.  1 published their report of five cases in a Japanese medical textbook in 1990. The first TTS case of this series was managed in 1983 in the Hiroshima City Hospital (Figure 1). A 64-year-old female presented with acute chest pain consistent with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), typical electrocardiographic (ECG) changes, but normal coronary arteries and an unusual appearance of the left ventricle (LV) with a narrow neck and apical ballooning during systole. Interestingly, the marked wall motion abnormalities on left ventriculography disappeared after 2 weeks. Over time TTS was more frequently diagnosed in Japan. Therefore, it was first assumed that this disorder only affected people of Asian descent, as TTS was completely unknown to the Western world until the first cases were published from French and American research groups in the late 1990s.2  ,  3 Desmet et al.  4 introduced the first patient case series in Caucasians using the term ‘takotsubo’.

Historical Japanese octopus trap (left). Courtesy of Dr Templin, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland. Left ventriculogram of the first reported case of takotsubo syndrome. Diastole (A) and systole (B) during the acute phase of takotsubo syndrome. Recovery of left ventricular wall motion abnormality two weeks after the event (C and D). Courtesy of Dr Dote, Hiroshima City Asa Hospital, Hiroshima, Japan.
Figure 1

Historical Japanese octopus trap (left). Courtesy of Dr Templin, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland. Left ventriculogram of the first reported case of takotsubo syndrome. Diastole (A) and systole (B) during the acute phase of takotsubo syndrome. Recovery of left ventricular wall motion abnormality two weeks after the event (C and D). Courtesy of Dr Dote, Hiroshima City Asa Hospital, Hiroshima, Japan.

Takotsubo syndrome gained international awareness among researcher and physicians when Wittstein et al.  5 reported their findings in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2005. Since then TTS has been more frequently recognized worldwide but still remains an underappreciated and often misdiagnosed disorder.6  ,  7

Nomenclature

Takotsubo syndrome derived its name from the Japanese word for octopus trap, due to the shape of the LV at the end of systole and has been described under a remarkable number of different names in the literature including ‘broken heart syndrome’, ‘stress cardiomyopathy’, and ‘apical ballooning syndrome’.8 No single term precisely describes the heterogeneous ventricular appearance with which this syndrome can occur. To date, consensus has not been reached on the nomenclature. The term ‘takotsubo’ is widely used in acknowledgement of the Japanese physicians who initially described this disorder.1 However, in contrast to other cardiomyopathies that are usually not transient in nature, TTS is characterized by a temporary wall motion abnormality of the LV and shares common features with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) [similar symptoms at presentation, ECG abnormalities, elevated cardiac biomarkers as well as a comparable in-hospital mortality with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and non-STEMI] specifically in terms of a microvascular ACS form.9 Among different etiologies of heart failure such as coronary artery disease (CAD), tachyarrhtyhmias etc. TTS includes a wide spectrum of emotional or physical triggers resulting also in left ventricular dysfunction. Therefore, it is best described as a ‘syndrome’ and the term ‘takotsubo syndrome’ seems most appropriate.9  ,  10  ,  11

Epidemiology

Since the initial report by Japanese cardiologists 25 years ago, TTS has been increasingly recognized in diverse countries across six continents. Takotsubo syndrome is estimated to represent approximately 1–3%12  ,  13 of all and 5–6%14 of female patients presenting with suspected STEMI. The Nationwide Inpatient Sample discharge records from 2008 using the International Classification of Diseases revealed that TTS accounts for 0.02% of hospitalizations in the United States.15 Recurrence rate of TTS is estimated to be 1.8% per-patient year.16 Based on the published literature about 90%16  ,  17 of TTS patients are women with a mean age of 67–70 years,16  ,  18 and around 80% are older than 50 years (Figure 2).16 Women older than 55 years have a five-fold greater risk of developing TTS than women younger than 55 years and a 10-fold greater risk than men.15 With growing awareness of TTS, male patients are diagnosed more often, especially after a physical triggering event.19 TTS has also been described in children20  ,  21 with the youngest reported TTS patient being a premature neonate born in the 28th gestational week.22 Current data on racial differences are inconsistent and large-scale studies are lacking. However, it has been reported that TTS seems to be uncommon in African–Americans and Hispanics,23 while most of the cases reported in the United States have been Caucasians.15  ,  24 Furthermore, it has been reported that patients of African-American descent have more in-hospital complications such as respiratory failure, stroke and require more frequently mechanical ventilation compared to Caucasians and Hispanics.25 With regard to ECG differences, it has been shown that QT prolongation as well as T-wave inversion are more often reported in African-American women with TTS. 26 Of note, regarding gender differences the TTS prevalence in men appears to be higher in Japan.19 The prevalence of TTS appears to be higher in patients with non-emotional triggers admitted to intensive care units.27 Moreover, it is likely that subclinical TTS cases remain undetected, especially in non-percutaneous coronary intervention centres.28

Age and sex distribution of patients with takotsubo syndrome. Reprinted with permission from Templin et al.  16
Figure 2

Age and sex distribution of patients with takotsubo syndrome. Reprinted with permission from Templin et al.  16

Symptoms and signs

The most common symptoms of TTS are acute chest pain, dyspnoea, or syncope and thus indistinguishable from AMI at the first glance.16 However, in some patients, TTS may be diagnosed incidentally by new ECG changes or a sudden elevation of cardiac biomarkers. Clinical manifestation of TTS induced by severe physical stress may be dominated by the manifestation of the underlying acute illness. In this regard, patients with ischaemic stroke or seizure-triggered, TTS had less frequent chest pain,29  ,  30 which could be explained by impaired consciousness, neurologic complications, or a sudden haemodynamic deterioration. In contrast, patients with emotional stress factors had a higher prevalence of chest pain and palpitations.31 Importantly, a subset of TTS patients may present with symptoms arising from its complications, e.g. heart failure, pulmonary oedema, stroke, cardiogenic shock, or cardiac arrest.

Diagnostic criteria

The diagnosis of TTS is often challenging because its clinical phenotype may closely resemble AMI regarding ECG abnormalities and biomarkers.32 While a widely established non-invasive tool allowing a rapid and reliable diagnosis of TTS is currently lacking, coronary angiography with left ventriculography is considered the gold standard diagnostic tool to exclude or confirm TTS.

Abe et al.  33 introduced the first diagnostic criteria for TTS in 2003. One year later, a dedicated group of cardiologists from the Mayo Clinic proposed their diagnostic criteria.34 In 2006, the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association classified TTS as a primary acquired cardiomyopathy.35 In 2008, the revised version of the Mayo Clinic Diagnostic Criteria was published incorporating neurogenic stunned myocardium.32 Furthermore, the authors defined different TTS sub-types and highlighted that obstructive coronary lesions may occasionally be present concomitantly.32 The Mayo Clinic Diagnostic Criteria are the most widely known, but exceptions to the rule [e.g. the presence of CAD] are poorly appreciated among physicians and cardiologists. More recently, other research groups have proposed slightly different criteria for TTS, i.e. the Japanese Guidelines,36 the Gothenburg criteria,37 the Johns Hopkins criteria,38 the Tako-tsubo Italian Network proposal,39 the criteria of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) TTS Taskforce of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC),10 as well as the criteria recommended by Madias.40 Thus, there is a lack of a worldwide consensus.41 Based on current knowledge, we have developed new international diagnostic criteria (InterTAK Diagnostic Criteria, Table 1) for the diagnosis of TTS that may help to improve identification and stratification of TTS. The most important changes with accompanying rationale include:

Table 1

International Takotsubo Diagnostic Criteria (InterTAK Diagnostic Criteria)

1.Patients show transienta left ventricular dysfunction (hypokinesia, akinesia, or dyskinesia) presenting as apical ballooning or midventricular, basal, or focal wall motion abnormalities. Right ventricular involvement can be present. Besides these regional wall motion patterns, transitions between all types can exist. The regional wall motion abnormality usually extends beyond a single epicardial vascular distribution; however, rare cases can exist where the regional wall motion abnormality is present in the subtended myocardial territory of a single coronary artery (focal TTS).b
2.An emotional, physical, or combined trigger can precede the takotsubo syndrome event, but this is not obligatory.
3.Neurologic disorders (e.g. subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, or seizures) as well as pheochromocytoma may serve as triggers for takotsubo syndrome.
4.New ECG abnormalities are present (ST-segment elevation, ST-segment depression, T-wave inversion, and QTc prolongation); however, rare cases exist without any ECG changes.
5.Levels of cardiac biomarkers (troponin and creatine kinase) are moderately elevated in most cases; significant elevation of brain natriuretic peptide is common.
6.Significant coronary artery disease is not a contradiction in takotsubo syndrome.
7.Patients have no evidence of infectious myocarditis.b
8.Postmenopausal women are predominantly affected.
1.Patients show transienta left ventricular dysfunction (hypokinesia, akinesia, or dyskinesia) presenting as apical ballooning or midventricular, basal, or focal wall motion abnormalities. Right ventricular involvement can be present. Besides these regional wall motion patterns, transitions between all types can exist. The regional wall motion abnormality usually extends beyond a single epicardial vascular distribution; however, rare cases can exist where the regional wall motion abnormality is present in the subtended myocardial territory of a single coronary artery (focal TTS).b
2.An emotional, physical, or combined trigger can precede the takotsubo syndrome event, but this is not obligatory.
3.Neurologic disorders (e.g. subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, or seizures) as well as pheochromocytoma may serve as triggers for takotsubo syndrome.
4.New ECG abnormalities are present (ST-segment elevation, ST-segment depression, T-wave inversion, and QTc prolongation); however, rare cases exist without any ECG changes.
5.Levels of cardiac biomarkers (troponin and creatine kinase) are moderately elevated in most cases; significant elevation of brain natriuretic peptide is common.
6.Significant coronary artery disease is not a contradiction in takotsubo syndrome.
7.Patients have no evidence of infectious myocarditis.b
8.Postmenopausal women are predominantly affected.
a

Wall motion abnormalities may remain for a prolonged period of time or documentation of recovery may not be possible. For example, death before evidence of recovery is captured.

b

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is recommended to exclude infectious myocarditis and diagnosis confirmation of takotsubo syndrome.

Table 1

International Takotsubo Diagnostic Criteria (InterTAK Diagnostic Criteria)

1.Patients show transienta left ventricular dysfunction (hypokinesia, akinesia, or dyskinesia) presenting as apical ballooning or midventricular, basal, or focal wall motion abnormalities. Right ventricular involvement can be present. Besides these regional wall motion patterns, transitions between all types can exist. The regional wall motion abnormality usually extends beyond a single epicardial vascular distribution; however, rare cases can exist where the regional wall motion abnormality is present in the subtended myocardial territory of a single coronary artery (focal TTS).b
2.An emotional, physical, or combined trigger can precede the takotsubo syndrome event, but this is not obligatory.
3.Neurologic disorders (e.g. subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, or seizures) as well as pheochromocytoma may serve as triggers for takotsubo syndrome.
4.New ECG abnormalities are present (ST-segment elevation, ST-segment depression, T-wave inversion, and QTc prolongation); however, rare cases exist without any ECG changes.
5.Levels of cardiac biomarkers (troponin and creatine kinase) are moderately elevated in most cases; significant elevation of brain natriuretic peptide is common.
6.Significant coronary artery disease is not a contradiction in takotsubo syndrome.
7.Patients have no evidence of infectious myocarditis.b
8.Postmenopausal women are predominantly affected.
1.Patients show transienta left ventricular dysfunction (hypokinesia, akinesia, or dyskinesia) presenting as apical ballooning or midventricular, basal, or focal wall motion abnormalities. Right ventricular involvement can be present. Besides these regional wall motion patterns, transitions between all types can exist. The regional wall motion abnormality usually extends beyond a single epicardial vascular distribution; however, rare cases can exist where the regional wall motion abnormality is present in the subtended myocardial territory of a single coronary artery (focal TTS).b
2.An emotional, physical, or combined trigger can precede the takotsubo syndrome event, but this is not obligatory.
3.Neurologic disorders (e.g. subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, or seizures) as well as pheochromocytoma may serve as triggers for takotsubo syndrome.
4.New ECG abnormalities are present (ST-segment elevation, ST-segment depression, T-wave inversion, and QTc prolongation); however, rare cases exist without any ECG changes.
5.Levels of cardiac biomarkers (troponin and creatine kinase) are moderately elevated in most cases; significant elevation of brain natriuretic peptide is common.
6.Significant coronary artery disease is not a contradiction in takotsubo syndrome.
7.Patients have no evidence of infectious myocarditis.b
8.Postmenopausal women are predominantly affected.
a

Wall motion abnormalities may remain for a prolonged period of time or documentation of recovery may not be possible. For example, death before evidence of recovery is captured.

b

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is recommended to exclude infectious myocarditis and diagnosis confirmation of takotsubo syndrome.

(i) Pheochromocytoma is a neuroendocrine tumour derived from enterochromaffin cells of the adrenal gland that may lead to a ‘catecholamine storm’ with LV dysfunction, ECG abnormalities, and increased biomarkers as well as hypercontraction of sarcomeres and contraction band necrosis indistinguishable from TTS.42

Notwithstanding, most of the diagnostic criteria have excluded pheochromocytoma as a specific cause of TTS.32–34  ,  36  ,  37  ,  40 The Japanese criteria emphasize that pheochromocytoma is a TTS-like myocardial dysfunction.36 Pheochromocytoma is also included as a secondary cause of TTS in the diagnostic criteria of the HFA of the ESC.10

(ii) Concomitant CAD is reported with a prevalence ranging from 10–29%.16  ,  43  ,  44 In this regard, patients with TTS and obstructive CAD are often misdiagnosed as classical ACS and differentiation can be challenging.45 Therefore, the presence of CAD should not be considered as an exclusion criterion as acknowledged by the modified Mayo Clinic Diagnostic Criteria.32 In such patients, the wall motion abnormalities usually extend beyond the territory of the involved coronary artery. Furthermore, TTS may co-exist with ACS46 and it has been reported that ACS itself may trigger TTS.47–50

(iii) There are rare cases in which the regional wall motion abnormality corresponds to the distribution of a single coronary artery.16  ,  32  ,  51 This holds true for the focal TTS type mostly involving an anterolateral segment.16  ,  51 Therefore, the criteria should not exclude cases in which the wall motion abnormalities are restricted to the distribution of a single coronary artery. In this situation, a clear differentiation of TTS, ACS, or myocarditis requires cardiac magnetic resonance imaging demonstrating myocardial oedema rather than late gadolinium enhancement in case of TTS.52

Pathophysiology

Sympathetic stimulation

The precise pathophysiological mechanisms of TTS are incompletely understood, but there is considerable evidence that sympathetic stimulation is central to its pathogenesis. An identifiable emotionally or physically triggering event precipitates the syndrome in most cases,16 and TTS has been associated with conditions of catecholamine excess (e.g. pheochromocytoma,53 central nervous system disorders54) and activated specific cerebral regions.55 Clinical features of TTS and the various ballooning patterns can be caused by intravenous administration of catecholamines and beta-agonists.56 Although it has been shown that patients with TTS triggered by emotional stress have markedly elevated levels of catecholamines compared to patients with Killip Class III myocardial infarction,5 others57 could not replicate this finding most likely due to methodological issues. In line with a sympathetic stimulation, elevated norepinephrine levels in the coronary sinus have been found in TTS patients, suggesting an increase in the local release of myocardial catecholamines.58 Accordingly, analyses of heart rate variability have also demonstrated a sympathetic predominance and marked depression of parasympathetic activity during the acute phase.59 Microneurographic studies confirmed increased muscle sympathetic nerve activity and decreased spontaneous baroreflex control of sympathetic tone in some TTS patients,60 as did myocardial scintigraphy using 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine.61 Furthermore, abnormalities in myocardial sympathetic function can persist for months after recovery of LV systolic function.62 These abnormalities appear to induce an interstitial mononuclear inflammatory response and occasionally contraction band necrosis.5

Several animal models have also supported the central role of adrenergic stimulation in TTS.63–65 In rats, LV apical ballooning can be provoked by immobilization stress and attenuated by alpha- and beta-receptor blockade.66 Furthermore, in a more recent and novel rat model, it was possible to demonstrate that the administration of different catecholamines instigates the various ventricular ballooning patterns by an afterload-dependent mechanism.67

Potential pathophysiological effects of enhanced sympathetic stimulation

Although enhanced sympathetic stimulation is central to TTS, the mechanism by which catecholamine excess precipitates myocardial stunning in the variety of regional ballooning patterns that characterize this syndrome is unknown. Several hypotheses have been proposed as follows:

Plaque rupture

It has been suggested that transient ischaemia induced by plaque rupture followed by rapid lysis may cause myocardial stunning in patients with apparent non-obstructed CAD at angiography. Indeed, eccentric atherosclerotic plaques in the mid-portion of the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery have been reported, but intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography have failed to identify ruptured plaques in the vast majority of TTS patients.68–70 Furthermore, this explanation is very unlikely as patients with TTS exhibit wall motion abnormalities extending beyond single coronary vascular territories and also sometimes include the right ventricle. In addition, the apical ballooning phenotype is known to occur in the absence of a wraparound LAD and this coronary anatomical variant is not more prevalent in TTS than in the control group.71

Multi-vessel epicardial spasm

Sympathetically mediated epicardial spasm has been proposed as a potential cause in TTS. Takotsubo syndrome may be associated with endothelial dysfunction and other conditions of abnormal vasomotor function such as migraine or Raynaud’s phenomenon.72 Similarly, endothelium-dependent dilation is reduced after emotional stress and prevented by endothelin antagonists.73 At presentation, patients with TTS have marked impairment in brachial artery flow-mediated dilation compared to those with infarction or healthy controls, which gradually improves over several weeks.74 In the early recovery period, predisposition to coronary vasospasm using intracoronary acetylcholine was demonstrated in some, but not all TTS patients.75 Furthermore, it has been suggested that the pattern of LV dysfunction in patients with TTS may require involvement of specific coronary side branches.76 Similarly, myocardial bridging in the LAD has been considered.77 Although epicardial coronary vasoconstriction may contribute to TTS in a subset of patients,1  ,  78 the vast majority of patients do not show any evidence of epicardial spasm even with use of provocative agents.

Furthermore, endothelial dysfunction is often associated with oxidative stress, and studies suggest that this may play a role in myocardial dysfunction in TTS. A recent study by Zhang et al.79 found that hydrogen sulfide relieved cardiac dysfunction in animal models by decreasing oxidative stress. It has been reported that the level of oxidative stress correlates to the extent of myocardial dysfunction in TTS patients in the acute recovery phase. Nanno et al.  80 measured 8-hydroxy-2’-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) and norepinephrine levels in TTS patients compared with AMI patients. They found that 8-OHdG levels changed proportionately with wall motion score and plasma levels of norepinephrine were twice as high in TTS patients as in AMI patients.

Microcirculatory dysfunction

Catecholamines and endothelin exert their vasoconstrictor effects primarily in the coronary microvasculature where α1-receptors81 and endothelin receptor type A predominate suggesting that acute microcirculatory dysfunction may have a central role in TTS. Furthermore, acutely TTS exhibits decreased microRNA (miRNA) 125a-5p as well as increased plasma levels of its target endothelin-1 in line with the microvascular spasms hypothesis.82 Microvascular blood flow may be reduced in the acute phase of TTS as is coronary flow reserve.83–87 Similarly, increased thrombolysis in myocardial infarction (TIMI) frame counts and abnormal grades of TIMI myocardial perfusion have been noted.11  ,  88

In the acute phase, intravenous administration of adenosine has been shown to transiently improve myocardial perfusion, wall motion score index, and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) in TTS, suggesting that intense microvascular constriction plays a major role in the pathophysiology.89 In addition, the notion of acute microcirculatory dysfunction in TTS as a contributing pathophysiological factor secondary to enhanced sympathetic stimulation is supported by endomyocardial biopsies revealing apoptosis of microvascular endothelial cells.90 Microcirculatory dysfunction in the acute phase of TTS is transient and its recovery appears to correlate with improved myocardial function.

Cold pressor testing 1–3 years after the acute episode results in an elevation of catecholamines and transient apical and mid-LV wall motion abnormalities.91 Mental stress or reactive hyperaemia result in lower vasomotor responses, but higher catecholamine levels in women with TTS compatible with impaired vascular reactivity and endothelial function.92 Similarly, in women with a history of TTS coronary vasomotion to acetylcholine is impaired.93 Impaired microvascular endothelial function was observed in virtually all patients with TTS.

Catecholamine toxicity on cardiomyocytes

Transient LV dysfunction in TTS could also result from direct effects of catecholamines on cardiomyocytes. Endomyocardial biopsies revealed occasional contraction band necrosis, which is generally observed in clinical settings of extreme catecholamine production such as pheochromocytoma or subarachnoid haemorrhage, associated with hypercontracted sarcomeres, dense eosinophilic transverse bands, and interstitial mononuclear inflammation as a reflection of myocyte injury.38 Catecholamines can decrease myocyte viability through cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) mediated Ca2+ overload as it may occur in TTS. Sarcoplasmic-Ca2+-adenosine-triphosphatase (SERCA2a) gene expression is downregulated and that of sarcolipin upregulated, while phospholamban is dephosphorylated in TTS.94 Thus, an increased phospholamban/SERCA2a ratio could result in contractile dysfunction due to decreased Ca2+-affinity.95 Indeed, intense G-protein stimulated β1-adrenergic receptor signalling modulates gene expression via the cAMP responsive element binding protein-1 and nuclear factor of activated T-cells signalling pathways.95

In rodent heart failure models, administration of isoproterenol yields apical fibrosis,96 and abnormalities of apical contraction and metabolism,97 features known to occur in dysfunctional apical segments during the acute phase in TTS using fludeoxyglucose-positron emission tomographic studies.98  ,  99 In animal models, intracellular lipid droplets accumulate in cardiomyocytes in response to high doses of catecholamines100 as in endomyocardial biopsies of TTS patients during the acute phase, but not after recovery.101 In a rat model of TTS myocardial perfusion in dysfunctional segments appears preserved, challenging microvascular spasm as a primary mediator.102

In the mammalian LV β-adrenergic receptor density is highest in the apex, while sympathetic innervation is the lowest63  ,  103–105 suggesting that it may be more sensitive to high levels of catecholamines which may reduce not only coronary blood flow, but at high levels paradoxically also exert negative inotropic effects63  ,  104 due to a ‘molecular switch’ of the β2-adrenergic receptor from the positive inotropic Gs to the negatively inotropic Gi pathway.106–108 Since the β2-adrenoceptor is linked via Gi activation to stimulation of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase, it seems possible, that peroxynitrate mediated nitrosative stress could lead to negative inotropy and inflammation in TTS. Indeed, TTS patients have markers of increased NO signalling109 and post-mortem hearts of TTS patients also demonstrate markers of increased nitrosative stress.110 Peroxynitrite release would also result in activation of poly(ADP-ribose)-transferase-1, which might contribute to the myocardial energetic impairment, which has recently been reported in patients with TTS.111 Endomyocardial biopsies in patients with TTS further suggest that these anti-apoptotic pathways are activated acutely.112 A polymorphism of the G-protein receptor kinase 5 (GRK5) gene L41Q that blunts β2-Gi trafficking appears common in TTS.113 On the other hand, a larger study failed to support the conclusions of this study.114

In summary, current evidence suggests that TTS is caused by an acute release of catecholamines from either sympathetic nerves, the adrenal medulla, or as drug therapy and occurs primarily in subjects with increased susceptibility of the coronary microcirculation and of cardiac myocytes to the stress hormones leading to prolonged but transient LV dysfunction with secondary myocardial inflammation.

Activation of myocardial survival pathways

The severe wall motion abnormalities seen in TTS are transient suggesting that protective mechanisms are likely to operate to preserve myocardial integrity. Two different mechanisms might elicit myocardial protection. The first one is represented by adrenoceptor-related protective mechanisms. Indeed, supra-physiological levels of epinephrine trigger β2-adrenoceptor to switch from Gs to Gi coupling, thus causing a negative inotropic response, which limits the degree of acute myocardial injury in response to the catecholamine surge.107 The second mechanism is represented by the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B (AKT) survival pathway, which has been found to be transiently activated during the acute phase of TTS.112 AKT is critical for postnatal cardiac growth and coronary angiogenesis. Also, its downstream targets, especially the mechanistic target of rapamycin and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3), are well-established regulators of metabolism, proliferation, and cell survival. Cell survival is achieved through various mechanisms: (i) direct inhibition of apoptosis, (ii) inhibition of proapoptotic transcriptional factors, (iii) enhancement of anti-apoptotic transcriptional factors, and (iv) enhancement of cell metabolism by inhibition of the GSK3.

The demonstration that down-regulation of myocardial function is a protective mechanism caused by a severe reduction of perfusion is confirmed by several clinical studies showing ‘inverse perfusion-metabolism mismatch,’ which is typically observed during myocardial stunning.115

Predisposition and risk factors

Psychological and physical stressors are universal and affect virtually all individuals throughout their life. However, very few people develop TTS and even fewer experience recurrent episodes. These observations support the existence of risk factors that may make certain individuals more susceptible to TTS. Predisposition and risk factors for TTS are reviewed below:

Hormonal factors

The striking preponderance of postmenopausal females suggests a hormonal influence. Potentially, declining oestrogen levels after menopause increase the susceptibility to TTS in women.116 Indeed, women older than 55 years have an almost five-fold risk of developing TTS compared to those younger than 55 years.15 Oestrogens can influence vasomotor tone via up-regulation of endothelial NO synthase.117 Also, there is evidence that oestrogens can attenuate catecholamine-mediated vasoconstriction and decrease the sympathetic response to mental stress in perimenopausal women.118  ,  119 In women with subarachnoid haemorrhage, low levels of oestradiol have been associated with an increased risk of LV wall motion abnormalities.120 In ovariectomized rats subjected to immobilization stress, ECG and contractile abnormalities can be induced and attenuated with oestrogen supplementation.121 However, systematic data demonstrating a clear link between oestrogen levels and the development of TTS are lacking so far.

Genetic factors

A genetic predisposition to TTS has been suggested by a report of five cases of familial TTS, two in mother-daughter pairs122  ,  123 and three in pairs of sisters.124–126 Takotsubo syndrome does not appear to have a multigenerational Mendelian inheritance pattern. Hence, it is likely that a genetic predisposition (if present) may interact with environmental factors, polygenic aetiology and/or recessive susceptibility alleles. Polymorphisms in adrenergic genes indeed affect receptor function and downstream signalling, 127 and this raises the possibility that their distribution may differ in TTS patients. Indeed, functional variants of adrenergic receptor genes have been associated with the magnitude of cardiac dysfunction in patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage128 and pheochromocytoma,129 conditions which can trigger TTS.

β1-adrenergic receptor (amino acid position 389) and β2-adrenergic receptor (amino acid position 27) variants were associated with a greater release of troponin I and α2-adrenergic receptor deletion (del322–325) with reduced LVEF.128 However, α2c-adrenergic receptor and β1-adrenergic receptor polymorphisms do not seem to differ between TTS and controls.130 In contrast, a different distribution of β1-receptor polymorphisms Arg389Gly [homozygous arginine (Arg)/Arg] is more frequently found in TTS, while β2-receptor polymorphisms Gln27Glu [homozygous glutamine (Gln)/Gln] were found more frequently in healthy controls, and no difference was observed in the β2-receptor Arg16Gly variant between groups.131 Furthermore, similar genetic polymorphisms in the β1-adrenergic receptor and the β2-adrenergic receptor were noted in TTS and controls, while a higher frequency of rs17098707 polymorphism in the GRK5 gene was found in TTS patients.113 Unfortunately, these studies provide conflicting results and are limited in their gene-targeted approach and incomplete in genetic characterization of the complex adrenergic signalling network. Whole-exome sequencing in 28 TTS subjects revealed no difference in allele frequency or burden between TTS subjects and population controls.132 As such, these data do not provide strong evidence for a genetic predisposition in TTS, but lend support to genetic heterogeneity and a potential polygenic susceptibility conferring a cumulative effect on dysregulation of adrenergic pathways. Most of the published studies were conducted in small cohorts and much larger cohorts are required to evaluate the genetics of TTS comprehensively.

Borchert et al.  133 have investigated a genetic predisposition for TTS by creating the first ‘takotsubo in a dish’ model by using TTS-specific induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs). This model recapitulates some of the pathophysiology observed in patients during the acute phase of TTS allowing further exploration of underlying mechanisms.134 They found an overactive β-adrenergic pathway and higher sensitivity of catecholamines in TTS iPSC-CMs and TTS engineered heart muscle.133 Interestingly, receptor desensitization and different β12-adrenoreceptor responses shed further light on the mechanisms of TTS. Based on this TTS-model future treatment targets should be identified to rescue patients with TTS.133  ,  134

Psychiatric and neurologic disorders

A high prevalence of psychiatric and neurologic disorders has been reported in patients with TTS. In an age- and sex-matched comparison between patients with TTS and ACS, rates of psychiatric or neurologic disorders were substantially higher in TTS.16 In this regard, 27% had an acute, former, or chronic history of neurologic disorders and 42% had a psychiatric diagnosis with half of them suffering from depression.16 Indeed, anxiety and depression appear more common in TTS than in patients with STEMI or healthy controls135 and in a prospective study, the prevalence of depression and anxiety was 78%, much higher than in patients with ACS.136 Patients with TTS also appear to have a high prevalence of type-D-personality, which is characterized by negative emotions and social inhibition, and which has been associated with an increased cardiovascular risk.137 However, another study found no difference in the personality profile and stress coping skills between TTS patients and population controls.138  ,  139 Interestingly, in a recent study comparing the signature of circulating miRNAs in TTS and STEMI, miR-16 and miR-26a, known to be associated with neuropsychiatric conditions, were significantly upregulated in TTS.82 Psychological disorders may thus have a pathogenic role. Of note, depressed patients have an exaggerated norepinephrine response to emotional stress,140 and a subset of patients has an increased spillover and decreased reuptake of norepinephrine. Similarly, patients with panic disorder and anxiety have a decreased catecholamine reuptake due to impairment of norepinephrine reuptake transporters.141 On the other hand, antidepressants, e.g. selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, may facilitate myocardial stunning by increasing local levels of catecholamines.142 This increased sympathetic response to acute stress combined with greater cardiac sympathetic sensitivity may make patients with mood disorders and anxiety susceptible to stress-related cardiac dysfunction.

Takotsubo syndrome has been reported to occur after neurologic disorders especially stroke,143 subarachnoid haemorrhage,144 and seizures.29 Histopathological findings of autopsied patients with sudden unexpected death in epilepsy revealed contraction band necrosis,145 abnormalities also found in autopsied patients with TTS.146 It has been demonstrated that regions of the insular or posterior fossa are mainly affected in patients with ischaemic stroke and epileptic events.147 This suggests that neurologic or psychiatric conditions may serve as predisposing factors for the development of TTS. Furthermore, a heart-brain interaction has been proposed in TTS. In this regard, substantial structural differences between TTS and healthy controls have been shown including the limbic network comprising the insula, amygdala, cingulate cortex, and hippocampus, all of which are strongly involved in the control of emotional processing, cognition, and the autonomic nervous system.148

Triggers

A hallmark of TTS is its association with a preceding stressful event. Initially, most reported triggers involved an emotional trauma.1 As TTS became more known, an association with physical stressors was also noted as well as TTS cases that occur in the absence of an evident stressor.16  ,  149 A systematic illustration of preceding emotional and physical stressors is shown in Figure 3.

Emotional and physical stress factors precipitating takotsubo syndrome. Reprinted, modified, and translated with permission from Schlossbauer et al.  7 COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; PRES, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome; TIA, transient ischaemic attack.
Figure 3

Emotional and physical stress factors precipitating takotsubo syndrome. Reprinted, modified, and translated with permission from Schlossbauer et al.  7 COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; PRES, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome; TIA, transient ischaemic attack.

Physical triggers are more common than emotional stress factors.16 Interestingly, male patients are more often affected from a physical stressful event, while in women an emotional trigger can be more frequently observed.16 Of note, precipitating triggers may represent a combination of emotional and physical issues16 (e.g. panic attack during a medical procedure), as well as environmental triggers such as long-term exposure to aircraft noise150. On the other hand, about one-third of patients presents without evidence of an identifiable preceding stressful event.151

In hospitalized patients, TTS may have an atypical presentation and manifest itself by tachycardia, hypotension, heart failure, elevation of cardiac biomarkers, or ECG abnormalities. It has been reported that patients with in-hospital TTS are more frequently males and have a higher prevalence of in-hospital death compared to patients with out-of-hospital TTS.152 This suggests that out-of-hospital TTS often occurs in the absence of a critical medical problem, while in-hospital TTS is preceded mainly by chronic comorbidities or acute medical illnesses.

Emotional stressors

Psychological triggers represent a range of traumatic emotions including grief (e.g. death of a family member, friend, or pet), interpersonal conflicts (e.g. divorce or family estrangement), fear and panic (e.g. robbery, assault, or public speaking), anger (e.g. argument with a family member or landlord), anxiety (e.g. personal illness, childcare, or homelessness), financial or employment problems (e.g. gambling loss, business failure, or job loss), or embarrassment (e.g. legal proceedings, infidelity, incarceration of family member, defeat in a competitive event).149 Natural disasters such as earthquakes153  ,  154 and floods155 are also associated with an increase in TTS events. However, emotional triggers are not always negative as positive emotional events can also provoke TTS (e.g. surprise birthday party, winning a jackpot, and positive job interview)156 as shown in Figure 3. This entity has been described as the 'happy heart syndrome.156

Physical stressors

Physical stressors may be related to physical activities (for instance heavy gardening157 or sports158), medical conditions, or procedures such as acute respiratory failure (e.g. asthma,159 end-stage chronic obstructive lung disease160), pancreatitis,161 cholecystitis,162 pneumothorax,163 traumatic injury,164 sepsis,165 thyrotoxicosis,166 malignancy also including chemotherapy167 and radiotherapy,168 pregnancy,169 Caesarean section,170 lightning strike,171 near drowning,172 hypothermia,173 cocaine,174 alcohol175 or opiate withdrawal,176 and carbon-monoxide poisoning.177 Exogenous drugs in terms of catecholamines56  ,  178 and sympathomimetic drugs56  ,  179 may also act as triggers for TTS including dobutamine stress testing,180 electrophysiological testing181 (with isoproterenol or epinephrine) and beta-agonists for asthma or chronic obstructive lung disease.179  ,  182 Also, acute coronary artery obstruction might act also as a trigger for TTS.47

Nervous system conditions (e.g. stroke,143 head trauma,183 migraine72, intracerebral haemorrhage,184 or seizures29) also represent an important trigger in the acute onset of TTS.

Endogenous catecholamine spillover related to pheochromocytoma serves as a distinct physical trigger.

Absence of identifiable causes

Recognition that TTS may occur spontaneously has demonstrated the inappropriateness of the term ‘stress cardiomyopathy’ to describe the entire spectrum of TTS. Whether the clinical course differs for this subset is unknown, and levels of catecholamines and related hormones have not been reported.

Types of takotsubo syndrome

Although several anatomical TTS variants have been described four major types can be differentiated based on the distribution of regional wall motion abnormalities as shown in Figure 4.16  ,  51 The most common TTS type and widely recognized form is the (i) apical ballooning type also known as the typical TTS form, which occurs in the majority of cases.16  ,  51 Over the past years, atypical TTS types have been increasingly recognized.51 These include the (ii) midventricular, (iii) basal, and (iv) focal wall motion patterns.51 Recently, it has been demonstrated that patients suffering from atypical TTS have a different clinical phenotype.51 These patients are younger, suffer more often from neurologic comorbidities, have lower brain natriuretic peptide values, a less impaired LVEF, and more frequent ST-segment depression compared to typical TTS.51  ,  185 In-hospital complication rate is similar between typical and atypical types, while 1-year mortality is higher in typical TTS.51 After adjustment for confounders, LVEF <45%, atrial fibrillation, neurologic disorders but not TTS phenotype were independent predictors of death.51 Beyond 1-year, long-term mortality is similar in typical and atypical TTS phenotypes, therefore, patients should be equally monitored and treated.51 The basal phenotype has been reported to be associated with the presence of pheochromocytoma,186 epinephrine-induced TTS,178 or subarachnoid haemorrhage187 consequently, these conditions should be considered in this particular setting.

The four different types of takotsubo syndrome during diastole (left column) and systole (middle column). The right column depicts diastole in red and systole in white. The blue dashed lines demonstrate the region of the wall motion abnormality. Reprinted and modified with permission from Templin et al.  16
Figure 4

The four different types of takotsubo syndrome during diastole (left column) and systole (middle column). The right column depicts diastole in red and systole in white. The blue dashed lines demonstrate the region of the wall motion abnormality. Reprinted and modified with permission from Templin et al.  16

Besides the four major TTS types, other morphological variants have been described including the biventricular (apical type and right ventricular involvement),19 isolated right ventricular,188  ,  189 and global form.190 Global hypokinesia as a manifestation of TTS is difficult to prove given the very broad differential diagnoses including conditions such as tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy. Right ventricular involvement is present in about one-third of TTS patients and may be a predictor for worse outcome.191 The true prevalence of the isolated right ventricular form is unknown since little attention is paid to the right ventricle in daily clinical echo routine.

Patients with recurrent TTS can demonstrate different wall motion patterns at each event,192  ,  193 suggesting that left ventricular adrenergic receptor distribution does not explain different TTS types.

Chronobiology

A growing body of evidence reveals that acute cardiovascular events are not distributed randomly over time, but instead depend on the time of day, day of the week, and months/season of the year.194–197 Several studies have investigated chronobiological features of TTS. Two studies reported a peak in the morning198  ,  199 and afternoon hours,200 while others failed to show a statistically significant temporal pattern.201 Two studies observed the highest frequency on Monday196  ,  202 and a third investigation has not found a weekly variation.198 Most conducted studies reported a summer preference for TTS,24  ,  203 while one study reported a winter peak.204 Hence, conflicting results about the chronobiological pattern of TTS exist.

Funding

J.R.G. has received a research grant “Filling the gap” from the University of Zurich.

Conflict of interest: none declared.

References

1

Sato
 
H.
 Tako-tsubo-like left ventricular dysfunction due to multivessel coronary spasm. In:
Kodama
 
K
,
Haze
 
K,
,
Hori
 
M
, eds.
Clinical Aspect of Myocardial Injury: From Ischemia to Heart Failure
.
Tokyo
:
Kagakuhyoronsha Publishing Co
;
1990
. p
56
64;
(Article in Japanese).

2

Pavin
 
D
,
Le Breton
 
H
,
Daubert
 
C.
 
Human stress cardiomyopathy mimicking acute myocardial syndrome
.
Heart
 
1997
;
78
:
509
511
.

3

Sharkey
 
SW
,
Shear
 
W
,
Hodges
 
M
,
Herzog
 
CA.
 
Reversible myocardial contraction abnormalities in patients with an acute noncardiac illness
.
Chest
 
1998
;
114
:
98
105
.

4

Desmet
 
WJ
,
Adriaenssens
 
BF
,
Dens
 
JA.
 
Apical ballooning of the left ventricle: first series in white patients
.
Heart
 
2003
;
89
:
1027
1031
.

5

Wittstein
 
IS
,
Thiemann
 
DR
,
Lima
 
JA
,
Baughman
 
KL
,
Schulman
 
SP
,
Gerstenblith
 
G
,
Wu
 
KC
,
Rade
 
JJ
,
Bivalacqua
 
TJ
,
Champion
 
HC.
 
Neurohumoral features of myocardial stunning due to sudden emotional stress
.
N Engl J Med
 
2005
;
352
:
539
548
.

6

Templin
 
C
,
Napp
 
LC
,
Ghadri
 
JR.
 
Takotsubo syndrome: underdiagnosed, underestimated, but understood?
 
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2016
;
67
:
1937
1940
.

7

Schlossbauer
 
SA
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Takotsubo-Syndrom—ein häufig verkanntes Krankheitsbild
.
Praxis (Bern 1994)
 
2016
;
105
:
1185
1192
.

8

Sharkey
 
SW
,
Lesser
 
JR
,
Maron
 
MS
,
Maron
 
BJ.
 
Why not just call it tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy: a discussion of nomenclature
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2011
;
57
:
1496
1497
.

9

Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Is takotsubo syndrome a microvascular acute coronary syndrome? Towards of a new definition
.
Eur Heart J
 
2016
;
37
:
2816
2820
.

10

Lyon
 
AR
,
Bossone
 
E
,
Schneider
 
B
,
Sechtem
 
U
,
Citro
 
R
,
Underwood
 
SR
,
Sheppard
 
MN
,
Figtree
 
GA
,
Parodi
 
G
,
Akashi
 
YJ
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Filippatos
 
G
,
Mebazaa
 
A
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Current state of knowledge on takotsubo syndrome: a position statement from the taskforce on takotsubo syndrome of the heart failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2016
;
18
:
8
27
.

11

Pelliccia
 
F
,
Sinagra
 
G
,
Elliott
 
P
,
Parodi
 
G
,
Basso
 
C
,
Camici
 
PG
.
Takotsubo is not a cardiomyopathy
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2018
;
254
:
250
253
.

12

Prasad
 
A
,
Dangas
 
G
,
Srinivasan
 
M
,
Yu
 
J
,
Gersh
 
BJ
,
Mehran
 
R
,
Stone
 
GW.
 
Incidence and angiographic characteristics of patients with apical ballooning syndrome (takotsubo/stress cardiomyopathy) in the HORIZONS-AMI trial: an analysis from a multicenter, international study of ST-elevation myocardial infarction
.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv
 
2014
;
83
:
343
348
.

13

Bybee
 
KA
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Barsness
 
GW
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Jaffe
 
AS
,
Murphy
 
JG
,
Wright
 
RS
,
Rihal
 
CS.
 
Clinical characteristics and thrombolysis in myocardial infarction frame counts in women with transient left ventricular apical ballooning syndrome
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2004
;
94
:
343
346
.

14

Redfors
 
B
,
Vedad
 
R
,
Angeras
 
O
,
Ramunddal
 
T
,
Petursson
 
P
,
Haraldsson
 
I
,
Ali
 
A
,
Dworeck
 
C
,
Odenstedt
 
J
,
Ioaness
 
D
,
Libungan
 
B
,
Shao
 
Y
,
Albertsson
 
P
,
Stone
 
GW
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Mortality in takotsubo syndrome is similar to mortality in myocardial infarction—a report from the SWEDEHEART registry
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2015
;
185
:
282
289
.

15

Deshmukh
 
A
,
Kumar
 
G
,
Pant
 
S
,
Rihal
 
C
,
Murugiah
 
K
,
Mehta
 
JL.
 
Prevalence of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the United States
.
Am Heart J
 
2012
;
164
:
66
71 e1
.

16

Templin
 
C
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Diekmann
 
J
,
Napp
 
LC
,
Bataiosu
 
DR
,
Jaguszewski
 
M
,
Cammann
 
VL
,
Sarcon
 
A
,
Geyer
 
V
,
Neumann
 
CA
,
Seifert
 
B
,
Hellermann
 
J
,
Schwyzer
 
M
,
Eisenhardt
 
K
,
Jenewein
 
J
,
Franke
 
J
,
Katus
 
HA
,
Burgdorf
 
C
,
Schunkert
 
H
,
Moeller
 
C
,
Thiele
 
H
,
Bauersachs
 
J
,
Tschöpe
 
C
,
Schultheiss
 
H-P
,
Laney
 
CA
,
Rajan
 
L
,
Michels
 
G
,
Pfister
 
R
,
Ukena
 
C
,
Böhm
 
M
,
Erbel
 
R
,
Cuneo
 
A
,
Kuck
 
K-H
,
Jacobshagen
 
C
,
Hasenfuss
 
G
,
Karakas
 
M
,
Koenig
 
W
,
Rottbauer
 
W
,
Said
 
SM
,
Braun-Dullaeus
 
RC
,
Cuculi
 
F
,
Banning
 
A
,
Fischer
 
TA
,
Vasankari
 
T
,
Airaksinen
 
KEJ
,
Fijalkowski
 
M
,
Rynkiewicz
 
A
,
Pawlak
 
M
,
Opolski
 
G
,
Dworakowski
 
R
,
MacCarthy
 
P
,
Kaiser
 
C
,
Osswald
 
S
,
Galiuto
 
L
,
Crea
 
F
,
Dichtl
 
W
,
Franz
 
WM
,
Empen
 
K
,
Felix
 
SB
,
Delmas
 
C
,
Lairez
 
O
,
Erne
 
P
,
Bax
 
JJ
,
Ford
 
I
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Lüscher
 
TF.
 
Clinical features and outcomes of takotsubo (stress) cardiomyopathy
.
N Engl J Med
 
2015
;
373
:
929
938
.

17

Schneider
 
B
,
Athanasiadis
 
A
,
Stollberger
 
C
,
Pistner
 
W
,
Schwab
 
J
,
Gottwald
 
U
,
Schoeller
 
R
,
Gerecke
 
B
,
Hoffmann
 
E
,
Wegner
 
C
,
Sechtem
 
U.
 
Gender differences in the manifestation of tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2013
;
166
:
584
588
.

18

Roshanzamir
 
S
,
Showkathali
 
R.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy a short review
.
Curr Cardiol Rev
 
2013
;
9
:
191
196
.

19

Aizawa
 
K
,
Suzuki
 
T.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: Japanese perspective
.
Heart Fail Clin
 
2013
;
9
:
243
247
.

20

Berton
 
E
,
Vitali-Serdoz
 
L
,
Vallon
 
P
,
Maschio
 
M
,
Gortani
 
G
,
Benettoni
 
A.
 
Young girl with apical ballooning heart syndrome
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2012
;
161
:
e4
e6
.

21

Otillio
 
JK
,
Harris
 
JK
,
Tuuri
 
R.
 
A 6-year-old girl with undiagnosed hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a case report and review of the literature
.
Pediatr Emerg Care
 
2014
;
30
:
561
565
.

22

Rozema
 
T
,
Klein
 
LR.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a case report and literature review
.
Cardiol Young
 
2016
;
26
:
406
409
.

23

Nascimento
 
FO
,
Larrauri-Reyes
 
MC
,
Santana
 
O
,
Pérez-Caminero
 
M
,
Lamas
 
GA.
 
Comparison of stress cardiomyopathy in hispanic and non-hispanic patients
.
Rev Esp Cardiol (Engl Ed)
 
2013
;
66
:
67
68
.

24

Regnante
 
RA
,
Zuzek
 
RW
,
Weinsier
 
SB
,
Latif
 
SR
,
Linsky
 
RA
,
Ahmed
 
HN
,
Sadiq
 
I.
 
Clinical characteristics and four-year outcomes of patients in the Rhode Island Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy Registry
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2009
;
103
:
1015
1019
.

25

Franco
 
E
,
Dias
 
A
,
Koshkelashvili
 
N
,
Pressman
 
GS
,
Hebert
 
K
,
Figueredo
 
VM
.
Distinctive electrocardiographic features in African Americans diagnosed with takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol
 
2016
;
21
:
486
492
.

26

Qaqa
 
A
,
Daoko
 
J
,
Jallad
 
N
,
Aburomeh
 
O
,
Goldfarb
 
I
,
Shamoon
 
F
.
Takotsubo syndrome in African American vs. non-African American women
.
West J Emerg Med
 
2011
;
12
:
218
223
.

27

Park
 
JH
,
Kang
 
SJ
,
Song
 
JK
,
Kim
 
HK
,
Lim
 
CM
,
Kang
 
DH
,
Koh
 
Y.
 
Left ventricular apical ballooning due to severe physical stress in patients admitted to the medical ICU
.
Chest
 
2005
;
128
:
296
302
.

28

Ghadri
 
JR
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: still much more to learn
.
Heart
 
2014
;
100
:
1804
1812
.

29

Stollberger
 
C
,
Wegner
 
C
,
Finsterer
 
J.
 
Seizure-associated Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Epilepsia
 
2011
;
52
:
e160
e167
.

30

Jung
 
JM
,
Kim
 
JG
,
Kim
 
JB
,
Cho
 
KH
,
Yu
 
S
,
Oh
 
K
,
Kim
 
YH
,
Choi
 
JY
,
Seo
 
WK.
 
Takotsubo-like myocardial dysfunction in ischemic stroke: a hospital-based registry and systematic literature review
.
Stroke
 
2016
;
47
:
2729
2736
.

31

Song
 
BG
,
Yang
 
HS
,
Hwang
 
HK
,
Kang
 
GH
,
Park
 
YH
,
Chun
 
WJ
,
Oh
 
JH.
 
The impact of stressor patterns on clinical features in patients with tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy: experiences of two tertiary cardiovascular centers
.
Clin Cardiol
 
2012
;
35
:
E6
E13
.

32

Prasad
 
A
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Rihal
 
CS.
 
Apical ballooning syndrome (tako-tsubo or stress cardiomyopathy): a mimic of acute myocardial infarction
.
Am Heart J
 
2008
;
155
:
408
417
.

33

Abe
 
Y
,
Kondo
 
M
,
Matsuoka
 
R
,
Araki
 
M
,
Dohyama
 
K
,
Tanio
 
H.
 
Assessment of clinical features in transient left ventricular apical ballooning
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2003
;
41
:
737
742
.

34

Bybee
 
KA
,
Kara
 
T
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Barsness
 
GW
,
Wright
 
RS
,
Rihal
 
CS.
 
Systematic review: transient left ventricular apical ballooning: a syndrome that mimics ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction
.
Ann Intern Med
 
2004
;
141
:
858
865
.

35

Maron
 
BJ
,
Towbin
 
JA
,
Thiene
 
G
,
Antzelevitch
 
C
,
Corrado
 
D
,
Arnett
 
D
,
Moss
 
AJ
,
Seidman
 
CE
,
Young
 
JB
;
American Heart Association
;
Council on Clinical Cardiology, Heart Failure and Transplantation Committee
;
Quality of Care and Outcomes Research and Functional Genomics and Translational Biology Interdisciplinary Working Groups
;
Council on Epidemiology and Prevention
.
Contemporary definitions and classification of the cardiomyopathies: an American Heart Association Scientific Statement from the Council on Clinical Cardiology, Heart Failure and Transplantation Committee; Quality of Care and Outcomes Research and Functional Genomics and Translational Biology Interdisciplinary Working Groups; and Council on Epidemiology and Prevention
.
Circulation
 
2006
;
113
:
1807
1816
.

36

Kawai
 
S
,
Kitabatake
 
A
,
Tomoike
 
H.
 
Guidelines for diagnosis of takotsubo (ampulla) cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2007
;
71
:
990
992
.

37

Schultz
 
T
,
Shao
 
Y
,
Redfors
 
B
,
Sverrisdottir
 
YB
,
Ramunddal
 
T
,
Albertsson
 
P
,
Matejka
 
G
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Stress-induced cardiomyopathy in Sweden: evidence for different ethnic predisposition and altered cardio-circulatory status
.
Cardiology
 
2012
;
122
:
180
186
.

38

Wittstein
 
IS.
 
Stress cardiomyopathy: a syndrome of catecholamine-mediated myocardial stunning?
 
Cell Mol Neurobiol
 
2012
;
32
:
847
857
.

39

Parodi
 
G
,
Citro
 
R
,
Bellandi
 
B
,
Provenza
 
G
,
Marrani
 
M
,
Bossone
 
E
;
Tako-Tsubo Italian Network
.
Revised clinical diagnostic criteria for tako-tsubo syndrome: the Tako-tsubo Italian Network proposal
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2014
;
172
:
282
283
.

40

Madias
 
JE.
 
Why the current diagnostic criteria of takotsubo syndrome are outmoded: a proposal for new criteria
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2014
;
174
:
468
470
.

41

Scantlebury
 
DC
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Diagnosis of takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2014
;
78
:
2129
2139
.

42

Samuels
 
MA.
 
The brain-heart connection
.
Circulation
 
2007
;
116
:
77
84
.

43

Winchester
 
DE
,
Ragosta
 
M
,
Taylor
 
AM.
 
Concurrence of angiographic coronary artery disease in patients with apical ballooning syndrome (tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy)
.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv
 
2008
;
72
:
612
616
.

44

Kurisu
 
S
,
Inoue
 
I
,
Kawagoe
 
T
,
Ishihara
 
M
,
Shimatani
 
Y
,
Nakama
 
Y
,
Maruhashi
 
T
,
Kagawa
 
E
,
Dai
 
K
,
Matsushita
 
J
,
Ikenaga
 
H.
 
Prevalence of incidental coronary artery disease in tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Coron Artery Dis
 
2009
;
20
:
214
218
.

45

Napp
 
LC
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Bauersachs
 
J
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Acute coronary syndrome or takotsubo cardiomyopathy: the suspect may not always be the culprit
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2015
;
187
:
116
119
.

46

Haghi
 
D
,
Papavassiliu
 
T
,
Hamm
 
K
,
Kaden
 
JJ
,
Borggrefe
 
M
,
Suselbeck
 
T.
 
Coronary artery disease in takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2007
;
71
:
1092
1094
.

47

Y-Hassan
 
S.
 
Takotsubo syndrome triggered by acute coronary syndrome in a cohort of 20 patients: an often missed diagnosis
.
Int J Cardiol Res
 
2015
;
02
:
28
33
.

48

Y-Hassan
 
S
,
Böhm
 
F.
 
The causal link between spontaneous coronary artery dissection and takotsubo syndrome: a case presented with both conditions
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2016
;
203
:
828
831
.

49

Redfors
 
B
,
Ramunddal
 
T
,
Shao
 
Y
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Takotsubo triggered by acute myocardial infarction: a common but overlooked syndrome?
 
J Geriatr Cardiol
 
2014
;
11
:
171
173
.

50

Napp
 
LC
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Cammann
 
VL
,
Bauersachs
 
J
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: completely simple but not so easy
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2015
;
197
:
257
259
.

51

Ghadri
 
JR
,
Cammann
 
VL
,
Napp
 
LC
,
Jurisic
 
S
,
Diekmann
 
J
,
Bataiosu
 
DR
,
Seifert
 
B
,
Jaguszewski
 
M
,
Sarcon
 
A
,
Neumann
 
CA
,
Geyer
 
V
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Bax
 
JJ
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C
;
International Takotsubo Registry
.
Differences in the clinical profile and outcomes of typical and atypical takotsubo syndrome: data from the International Takotsubo Registry
.
JAMA Cardiol
 
2016
;
1
:
335
340
.

52

Kato
 
K
,
Kitahara
 
H
,
Fujimoto
 
Y
,
Sakai
 
Y
,
Ishibashi
 
I
,
Himi
 
T
,
Kobayashi
 
Y.
 
Prevalence and clinical features of focal takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2016
;
80
:
1824
1829
.

53

Giavarini
 
A
,
Chedid
 
A
,
Bobrie
 
G
,
Plouin
 
PF
,
Hagege
 
A
,
Amar
 
L.
 
Acute catecholamine cardiomyopathy in patients with phaeochromocytoma or functional paraganglioma
.
Heart
 
2013
;
99
:
1438
1444
.

54

Finsterer
 
J
,
Wahbi
 
K.
 
CNS disease triggering Takotsubo stress cardiomyopathy
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2014
;
177
:
322
329
.

55

Suzuki
 
H
,
Matsumoto
 
Y
,
Kaneta
 
T
,
Sugimura
 
K
,
Takahashi
 
J
,
Fukumoto
 
Y
,
Takahashi
 
S
,
Shimokawa
 
H.
 
Evidence for brain activation in patients with takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2014
;
78
:
256
258
.

56

Abraham
 
J
,
Mudd
 
JO
,
Kapur
 
NK
,
Klein
 
K
,
Champion
 
HC
,
Wittstein
 
IS.
 
Stress cardiomyopathy after intravenous administration of catecholamines and beta-receptor agonists
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2009
;
53
:
1320
1325
.

57

Y-Hassan
 
S
,
Henareh
 
L.
 
Plasma catecholamine levels in patients with takotsubo syndrome: implications for the pathogenesis of the disease
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2015
;
181
:
35
38
.

58

Kume
 
T
,
Kawamoto
 
T
,
Okura
 
H
,
Toyota
 
E
,
Neishi
 
Y
,
Watanabe
 
N
,
Hayashida
 
A
,
Okahashi
 
N
,
Yoshimura
 
Y
,
Saito
 
K
,
Nezuo
 
S
,
Yamada
 
R
,
Yoshida
 
K.
 
Local release of catecholamines from the hearts of patients with tako-tsubo-like left ventricular dysfunction
.
Circ J
 
2008
;
72
:
106
108
.

59

Ortak
 
J
,
Khattab
 
K
,
Barantke
 
M
,
Wiegand
 
UK
,
Bansch
 
D
,
Ince
 
H
,
Nienaber
 
CA
,
Bonnemeier
 
H.
 
Evolution of cardiac autonomic nervous activity indices in patients presenting with transient left ventricular apical ballooning
.
Pacing Clin Electrophysiol
 
2009
;
32
:
S21
S25
.

60

Vaccaro
 
A
,
Despas
 
F
,
Delmas
 
C
,
Lairez
 
O
,
Lambert
 
E
,
Lambert
 
G
,
Labrunee
 
M
,
Guiraud
 
T
,
Esler
 
M
,
Galinier
 
M
,
Senard
 
JM
,
Pathak
 
A.
 
Direct evidences for sympathetic hyperactivity and baroreflex impairment in Tako Tsubo cardiopathy
.
PLoS One
 
2014
;
9
:
e93278.

61

Burgdorf
 
C
,
von Hof
 
K
,
Schunkert
 
H
,
Kurowski
 
V.
 
Regional alterations in myocardial sympathetic innervation in patients with transient left-ventricular apical ballooning (Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy)
.
J Nucl Cardiol
 
2008
;
15
:
65
72
.

62

Verberne
 
HJ
,
van der Heijden
 
DJ
,
van Eck-Smit
 
BL
,
Somsen
 
GA.
 
Persisting myocardial sympathetic dysfunction in takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
J Nucl Cardiol
 
2009
;
16
:
321
324
.

63

Paur
 
H
,
Wright
 
PT
,
Sikkel
 
MB
,
Tranter
 
MH
,
Mansfield
 
C
,
O'Gara
 
P
,
Stuckey
 
DJ
,
Nikolaev
 
VO
,
Diakonov
 
I
,
Pannell
 
L
,
Gong
 
H
,
Sun
 
H
,
Peters
 
NS
,
Petrou
 
M
,
Zheng
 
Z
,
Gorelik
 
J
,
Lyon
 
AR
,
Harding
 
SE.
 
High levels of circulating epinephrine trigger apical cardiodepression in a β2-adrenergic receptor/Gi-dependent manner: a new model of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circulation
 
2012
;
126
:
697
706
.

64

Shao
 
Y
,
Redfors
 
B
,
Scharin Tang
 
M
,
Mollmann
 
H
,
Troidl
 
C
,
Szardien
 
S
,
Hamm
 
C
,
Nef
 
H
,
Boren
 
J
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Novel rat model reveals important roles of beta-adrenoreceptors in stress-induced cardiomyopathy
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2013
;
168
:
1943
1950
.

65

Sachdeva
 
J
,
Dai
 
W
,
Kloner
 
RA.
 
Functional and histological assessment of an experimental model of Takotsubo's cardiomyopathy
.
J Am Heart Assoc
 
2014
;
3
:
e000921.

66

Ueyama
 
T
,
Kasamatsu
 
K
,
Hano
 
T
,
Yamamoto
 
K
,
Tsuruo
 
Y
,
Nishio
 
I.
 
Emotional stress induces transient left ventricular hypocontraction in the rat via activation of cardiac adrenoceptors: a possible animal model of ′tako-tsubo′ cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2002
;
66
:
712
713
.

67

Redfors
 
B
,
Ali
 
A
,
Shao
 
Y
,
Lundgren
 
J
,
Gan
 
LM
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Different catecholamines induce different patterns of takotsubo-like cardiac dysfunction in an apparently afterload dependent manner
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2014
;
174
:
330
336
.

68

Delgado
 
GA
,
Truesdell
 
AG
,
Kirchner
 
RM
,
Zuzek
 
RW
,
Pomerantsev
 
EV
,
Gordon
 
PC
,
Regnante
 
RA.
 
An angiographic and intravascular ultrasound study of the left anterior descending coronary artery in takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2011
;
108
:
888
891
.

69

Pawlowski
 
T
,
Mintz
 
GS
,
Kulawik
 
T
,
Gil
 
RJ.
 
Virtual histology intravascular ultrasound evaluation of the left anterior descending coronary artery in patients with transient left ventricular ballooning syndrome
.
Kardiol Pol
 
2010
;
68
:
1093
1098
.

70

Eitel
 
I
,
Stiermaier
 
T
,
Graf
 
T
,
Moller
 
C
,
Rommel
 
KP
,
Eitel
 
C
,
Schuler
 
G
,
Thiele
 
H
,
Desch
 
S.
 
Optical coherence tomography to evaluate plaque burden and morphology in patients with Takotsubo syndrome
.
J Am Heart Assoc
 
2016
;
5
.

71

Hoyt
 
J
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Lennon
 
RJ
,
Rihal
 
CS
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Left anterior descending artery length and coronary atherosclerosis in apical ballooning syndrome (Takotsubo/stress induced cardiomyopathy)
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2010
;
145
:
112
115
.

72

Scantlebury
 
DC
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Rabinstein
 
AA
,
Best
 
PJ.
 
Prevalence of migraine and Raynaud phenomenon in women with apical ballooning syndrome (Takotsubo or stress cardiomyopathy)
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2013
;
111
:
1284
1288
.

73

Spieker
 
LE
,
Hurlimann
 
D
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Corti
 
R
,
Enseleit
 
F
,
Shaw
 
S
,
Hayoz
 
D
,
Deanfield
 
JE
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Noll
 
G.
 
Mental stress induces prolonged endothelial dysfunction via endothelin-A receptors
.
Circulation
 
2002
;
105
:
2817
2820
.

74

Vasilieva
 
E
,
Vorobyeva
 
I
,
Lebedeva
 
A
,
Urazovskaya
 
I
,
Kalinskaya
 
A
,
Skrypnik
 
D
,
Shpektor
 
A.
 
Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation in patients with tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Am J Med
 
2011
;
124
:
1176
1179
.

75

Tsuchihashi
 
K
,
Ueshima
 
K
,
Uchida
 
T
,
Oh-Mura
 
N
,
Kimura
 
K
,
Owa
 
M
,
Yoshiyama
 
M
,
Miyazaki
 
S
,
Haze
 
K
,
Ogawa
 
H
,
Honda
 
T
,
Hase
 
M
,
Kai
 
R
,
Morii
 
I
;
Angina Pectoris-Myocardial Infarction Investigations in
Japan.
Transient left ventricular apical ballooning without coronary artery stenosis: a novel heart syndrome mimicking acute myocardial infarction. Angina Pectoris-Myocardial Infarction Investigations in Japan
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2001
;
38
:
11
18
.

76

Angelini
 
P
,
Monge
 
J
,
Simpson
 
L.
 
Biventricular takotsubo cardiomyopathy: case report and general discussion
.
Tex Heart Inst J
 
2013
;
40
:
312
315
.

77

Migliore
 
F
,
Maffei
 
E
,
Perazzolo Marra
 
M
,
Bilato
 
C
,
Napodano
 
M
,
Corbetti
 
F
,
Zorzi
 
A
,
Andres
 
AL
,
Sarais
 
C
,
Cacciavillani
 
L
,
Favaretto
 
E
,
Martini
 
C
,
Seitun
 
S
,
Cademartiri
 
F
,
Corrado
 
D
,
Iliceto
 
S
,
Tarantini
 
G.
 
LAD coronary artery myocardial bridging and apical ballooning syndrome
.
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2013
;
6
:
32
41
.

78

Fiol
 
M
,
Carrillo
 
A
,
Rodriguez
 
A
,
Herrero
 
J
,
Garcia-Niebla
 
J.
 
Left ventricular ballooning syndrome due to vasospasm of the middle portion of the left anterior descending coronary artery
.
Cardiol J
 
2012
;
19
:
314
316
.

79

Zhang
 
Z
,
Jin
 
S
,
Teng
 
X
,
Duan
 
X
,
Chen
 
Y
,
Wu
 
Y.
 
Hydrogen sulfide attenuates cardiac injury in takotsubo cardiomyopathy by alleviating oxidative stress
.
Nitric Oxide
 
2017
;
67
:
10
25
.

80

Nanno
 
T
,
Kobayashi
 
Y
,
Oda
 
S
,
Ishiguchi
 
H
,
Myoren
 
T
,
Miyazaki
 
Y
,
Suetomi
 
T
,
Ono
 
M
,
Mochizuki
 
M
,
Oda
 
T
,
Okuda
 
S
,
Yamada
 
J
,
Okamura
 
T
,
Yano
 
M.
 
A Marked increase in myocardial oxidative stress associated with sympathetic hyperactivity is related to transient myocardial dysfunction in patients with takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circulation
 
2015
;
132
:
A14124
.

81

Cohen
 
RA
,
Shepherd
 
JT
,
Vanhoutte
 
PM.
 
Prejunctional and postjunctional actions of endogenous norepinephrine at the sympathetic neuroeffector junction in canine coronary arteries
.
Circ Res
 
1983
;
52
:
16
25
.

82

Jaguszewski
 
M
,
Osipova
 
J
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Napp
 
LC
,
Widera
 
C
,
Franke
 
J
,
Fijalkowski
 
M
,
Nowak
 
R
,
Fijalkowska
 
M
,
Volkmann
 
I
,
Katus
 
HA
,
Wollert
 
KC
,
Bauersachs
 
J
,
Erne
 
P
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Thum
 
T
,
Templin
 
C.
 
A signature of circulating microRNAs differentiates takotsubo cardiomyopathy from acute myocardial infarction
.
Eur Heart J
 
2014
;
35
:
999
1006
.

83

Ghadri
 
JR
,
Dougoud
 
S
,
Maier
 
W
,
Kaufmann
 
PA
,
Gaemperli
 
O
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C.
 
A PET/CT-follow-up imaging study to differentiate takotsubo cardiomyopathy from acute myocardial infarction
.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2014
;
30
:
207
209
.

84

Meimoun
 
P
,
Malaquin
 
D
,
Sayah
 
S
,
Benali
 
T
,
Luycx-Bore
 
A
,
Levy
 
F
,
Zemir
 
H
,
Tribouilloy
 
C.
 
The coronary flow reserve is transiently impaired in tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy: a prospective study using serial Doppler transthoracic echocardiography
.
J Am Soc Echocardiogr
 
2008
;
21
:
72
77
.

85

Rigo
 
F
,
Sicari
 
R
,
Citro
 
R
,
Ossena
 
G
,
Buja
 
P
,
Picano
 
E.
 
Diffuse, marked, reversible impairment in coronary microcirculation in stress cardiomyopathy: a Doppler transthoracic echo study
.
Ann Med
 
2009
;
41
:
462
470
.

86

Kume
 
T
,
Akasaka
 
T
,
Kawamoto
 
T
,
Yoshitani
 
H
,
Watanabe
 
N
,
Neishi
 
Y
,
Wada
 
N
,
Yoshida
 
K.
 
Assessment of coronary microcirculation in patients with takotsubo-like left ventricular dysfunction
.
Circ J
 
2005
;
69
:
934
939
.

87

Cuisset
 
T
,
Quilici
 
J
,
Pankert
 
M
,
Fourcade
 
L
,
Poyet
 
R
,
Lambert
 
M
,
Bonnet
 
JL.
 
Usefulness of index of microcirculatory resistance to detect microvascular dysfunction as a potential mechanism of stress-induced cardiomyopathy (Tako-tsubo syndrome)
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2011
;
153
:
e51
e53
.

88

Elesber
 
A
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Bybee
 
KA
,
Murphy
 
JG
,
Barsness
 
G
,
Singh
 
M
,
Rihal
 
CS
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Myocardial perfusion in apical ballooning syndrome correlate of myocardial injury
.
Am Heart J
 
2006
;
152
:
469 e9
413
.

89

Galiuto
 
L
,
De Caterina
 
AR
,
Porfidia
 
A
,
Paraggio
 
L
,
Barchetta
 
S
,
Locorotondo
 
G
,
Rebuzzi
 
AG
,
Crea
 
F.
 
Reversible coronary microvascular dysfunction: a common pathogenetic mechanism in apical ballooning or tako-tsubo syndrome
.
Eur Heart J
 
2010
;
31
:
1319
1327
.

90

Uchida
 
Y
,
Egami
 
H
,
Uchida
 
Y
,
Sakurai
 
T
,
Kanai
 
M
,
Shirai
 
S
,
Nakagawa
 
O
,
Oshima
 
T.
 
Possible participation of endothelial cell apoptosis of coronary microvessels in the genesis of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Clin Cardiol
 
2010
;
33
:
371
377
.

91

Barletta
 
G
,
Del Pace
 
S
,
Boddi
 
M
,
Del Bene
 
R
,
Salvadori
 
C
,
Bellandi
 
B
,
Coppo
 
M
,
Saletti
 
E
,
Gensini
 
GF.
 
Abnormal coronary reserve and left ventricular wall motion during cold pressor test in patients with previous left ventricular ballooning syndrome
.
Eur Heart J
 
2009
;
30
:
3007
3014
.

92

Martin
 
EA
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Rihal
 
CS
,
Lerman
 
LO
,
Lerman
 
A.
 
Endothelial function and vascular response to mental stress are impaired in patients with apical ballooning syndrome
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2010
;
56
:
1840
1846
.

93

Patel
 
SM
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Lennon
 
RJ
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Impaired coronary microvascular reactivity in women with apical ballooning syndrome (takotsubo/stress cardiomyopathy)
.
Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care
 
2013
;
2
:
147
152
.

94

Nef
 
HM
,
Mollmann
 
H
,
Troidl
 
C
,
Kostin
 
S
,
Voss
 
S
,
Hilpert
 
P
,
Behrens
 
CB
,
Rolf
 
A
,
Rixe
 
J
,
Weber
 
M
,
Hamm
 
CW
,
Elsasser
 
A.
 
Abnormalities in intracellular Ca2+ regulation contribute to the pathomechanism of tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Eur Heart J
 
2009
;
30
:
2155
2164
.

95

Nef
 
HM
,
Mollmann
 
H
,
Akashi
 
YJ
,
Hamm
 
CW.
 
Mechanisms of stress (Takotsubo) cardiomyopathy
.
Nat Rev Cardiol
 
2010
;
7
:
187
193
.

96

Rona
 
G.
 
Catecholamine cardiotoxicity
.
J Mol Cell Cardiol
 
1985
;
17
:
291
306
.

97

Heather
 
LC
,
Catchpole
 
AF
,
Stuckey
 
DJ
,
Cole
 
MA
,
Carr
 
CA
,
Clarke
 
K.
 
Isoproterenol induces in vivo functional and metabolic abnormalities: similar to those found in the infarcted rat heart
.
J Physiol Pharmacol
 
2009
;
60
:
31
39
.

98

Christensen
 
TE
,
Bang
 
LE
,
Holmvang
 
L
,
Ghotbi
 
AA
,
Lassen
 
ML
,
Andersen
 
F
,
Ihlemann
 
N
,
Andersson
 
H
,
Grande
 
P
,
Kjaer
 
A
,
Hasbak
 
P.
 
Cardiac (9)(9)mTc sestamibi SPECT and (1)(8)F FDG PET as viability markers in takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2014
;
30
:
1407
1416
.

99

Rendl
 
G
,
Rettenbacher
 
L
,
Keinrath
 
P
,
Altenberger
 
J
,
Schuler
 
J
,
Heigert
 
M
,
Pichler
 
M
,
Pirich
 
C.
 
Different pattern of regional metabolic abnormalities in takotsubo cardiomyopathy as evidenced by F-18 FDG PET-CT
.
Wiener Klin Wochenschr
 
2010
;
122
:
184
185
.

100

Shao
 
Y
,
Redfors
 
B
,
Stahlman
 
M
,
Tang
 
MS
,
Miljanovic
 
A
,
Mollmann
 
H
,
Troidl
 
C
,
Szardien
 
S
,
Hamm
 
C
,
Nef
 
H
,
Boren
 
J
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
A mouse model reveals an important role for catecholamine-induced lipotoxicity in the pathogenesis of stress-induced cardiomyopathy
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2013
;
15
:
9
22
.

101

Nef
 
HM
,
Mollmann
 
H
,
Kostin
 
S
,
Troidl
 
C
,
Voss
 
S
,
Weber
 
M
,
Dill
 
T
,
Rolf
 
A
,
Brandt
 
R
,
Hamm
 
CW
,
Elsasser
 
A.
 
Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy: intraindividual structural analysis in the acute phase and after functional recovery
.
Eur Heart J
 
2007
;
28
:
2456
2464
.

102

Redfors
 
B
,
Shao
 
Y
,
Wikstrom
 
J
,
Lyon
 
AR
,
Oldfors
 
A
,
Gan
 
LM
,
Omerovic
 
E.
 
Contrast echocardiography reveals apparently normal coronary perfusion in a rat model of stress-induced (Takotsubo) cardiomyopathy
.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2014
;
15
:
152
157
.

103

Kawano
 
H
,
Okada
 
R
,
Yano
 
K.
 
Histological study on the distribution of autonomic nerves in the human heart
.
Heart Vessels
 
2003
;
18
:
32
39
.

104

Lyon
 
AR
,
Rees
 
PS
,
Prasad
 
S
,
Poole-Wilson
 
PA
,
Harding
 
SE.
 
Stress (Takotsubo) cardiomyopathy–a novel pathophysiological hypothesis to explain catecholamine-induced acute myocardial stunning
.
Nat Clini Pract Cardiovasc Med
 
2008
;
5
:
22
29
.

105

Mori
 
H
,
Ishikawa
 
S
,
Kojima
 
S
,
Hayashi
 
J
,
Watanabe
 
Y
,
Hoffman
 
JI
,
Okino
 
H.
 
Increased responsiveness of left ventricular apical myocardium to adrenergic stimuli
.
Cardiovasc Res
 
1993
;
27
:
192
198
.

106

Communal
 
C
,
Colucci
 
WS
,
Singh
 
K.
 
p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway protects adult rat ventricular myocytes against beta -adrenergic receptor-stimulated apoptosis. Evidence for Gi-dependent activation
.
J Biol Chem
 
2000
;
275
:
19395
19400
.

107

Heubach
 
JF
,
Ravens
 
U
,
Kaumann
 
AJ.
 
Epinephrine activates both Gs and Gi pathways, but norepinephrine activates only the Gs pathway through human beta2-adrenoceptors overexpressed in mouse heart
.
Mol Pharmacol
 
2004
;
65
:
1313
1322
.

108

Zhu
 
WZ
,
Zheng
 
M
,
Koch
 
WJ
,
Lefkowitz
 
RJ
,
Kobilka
 
BK
,
Xiao
 
RP.
 
Dual modulation of cell survival and cell death by beta(2)-adrenergic signaling in adult mouse cardiac myocytes
.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
 
2001
;
98
:
1607
1612
.

109

Nguyen
 
TH
,
Neil
 
CJ
,
Sverdlov
 
AL
,
Ngo
 
DT
,
Chan
 
WP
,
Heresztyn
 
T
,
Chirkov
 
YY
,
Tsikas
 
D
,
Frenneaux
 
MP
,
Horowitz
 
JD.
 
Enhanced NO signaling in patients with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: short-term pain, long-term gain?
 
Cardiovasc Drugs Ther
 
2013
;
27
:
541
547
.

110

Surikow
 
SY
,
Raman
 
B
,
Licari
 
J
,
Singh
 
K
,
Nguyen
 
TH
,
Horowitz
 
JD.
 
Evidence of nitrosative stress within hearts of patients dying of Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2015
;
189
:
112
114
.

111

Dawson
 
DK
,
Neil
 
CJ
,
Henning
 
A
,
Cameron
 
D
,
Jagpal
 
B
,
Bruce
 
M
,
Horowitz
 
J
,
Frenneaux
 
MP.
 
Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy: a heart stressed out of energy?
 
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2015
;
8
:
985
987
.

112

Nef
 
HM
,
Mollmann
 
H
,
Hilpert
 
P
,
Troidl
 
C
,
Voss
 
S
,
Rolf
 
A
,
Behrens
 
CB
,
Weber
 
M
,
Hamm
 
CW
,
Elsasser
 
A.
 
Activated cell survival cascade protects cardiomyocytes from cell death in Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2009
;
11
:
758
764
.

113

Spinelli
 
L
,
Trimarco
 
V
,
Di Marino
 
S
,
Marino
 
M
,
Iaccarino
 
G
,
Trimarco
 
B.
 
L41Q polymorphism of the G protein coupled receptor kinase 5 is associated with left ventricular apical ballooning syndrome
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2010
;
12
:
13
16
.

114

Figtree
 
GA
,
Bagnall
 
RD
,
Abdulla
 
I
,
Buchholz
 
S
,
Galougahi
 
KK
,
Yan
 
W
,
Tan
 
T
,
Neil
 
C
,
Horowitz
 
JD
,
Semsarian
 
C
,
Ward
 
MR.
 
No association of G-protein-coupled receptor kinase 5 or beta-adrenergic receptor polymorphisms with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in a large Australian cohort
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2013
;
15
:
730
733
.

115

Vitale
 
C
,
Rosano
 
GM
,
Kaski
 
JC.
 
Role of coronary microvascular dysfunction in takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2016
;
80
:
299
305
.

116

Ueyama
 
T
,
Kasamatsu
 
K
,
Hano
 
T
,
Tsuruo
 
Y
,
Ishikura
 
F.
 
Catecholamines and estrogen are involved in the pathogenesis of emotional stress-induced acute heart attack
.
Ann N Y Acad Sci
 
2008
;
1148
:
479
485
.

117

Sader
 
MA
,
Celermajer
 
DS.
 
Endothelial function, vascular reactivity and gender differences in the cardiovascular system
.
Cardiovasc Res
 
2002
;
53
:
597
604
.

118

Komesaroff
 
PA
,
Esler
 
MD
,
Sudhir
 
K.
 
Estrogen supplementation attenuates glucocorticoid and catecholamine responses to mental stress in perimenopausal women
.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
 
1999
;
84
:
606
610
.

119

Sung
 
BH
,
Ching
 
M
,
Izzo
 
JL
 Jr
,
Dandona
 
P
,
Wilson
 
MF.
 
Estrogen improves abnormal norepinephrine-induced vasoconstriction in postmenopausal women
.
J Hypertens
 
1999
;
17
:
523
528
.

120

Sugimoto
 
K
,
Inamasu
 
J
,
Hirose
 
Y
,
Kato
 
Y
,
Ito
 
K
,
Iwase
 
M
,
Sugimoto
 
K
,
Watanabe
 
E
,
Takahashi
 
A
,
Ozaki
 
Y.
 
The role of norepinephrine and estradiol in the pathogenesis of cardiac wall motion abnormality associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage
.
Stroke
 
2012
;
43
:
1897
1903
.

121

Ueyama
 
T
,
Ishikura
 
F
,
Matsuda
 
A
,
Asanuma
 
T
,
Ueda
 
K
,
Ichinose
 
M
,
Kasamatsu
 
K
,
Hano
 
T
,
Akasaka
 
T
,
Tsuruo
 
Y
,
Morimoto
 
K
,
Beppu
 
S.
 
Chronic estrogen supplementation following ovariectomy improves the emotional stress-induced cardiovascular responses by indirect action on the nervous system and by direct action on the heart
.
Circ J
 
2007
;
71
:
565
573
.

122

Cherian
 
J
,
Angelis
 
D
,
Filiberti
 
A
,
Saperia
 
G.
 
Can takotsubo cardiomyopathy be familial?
 
Int J Cardiol
 
2007
;
121
:
74
75
.

123

Kumar
 
G
,
Holmes
 
DR
 Jr
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
“Familial” apical ballooning syndrome (Takotsubo cardiomyopathy)
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2010
;
144
:
444
445
.

124

Ikutomi
 
M
,
Yamasaki
 
M
,
Matsusita
 
M
,
Watari
 
Y
,
Arashi
 
H
,
Endo
 
G
,
Yamaguchi
 
JI
,
Ohnishi
 
S.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in siblings
.
Heart Vessels
 
2014
;
29
:
119
122
.

125

Pison
 
L
,
De Vusser
 
P
,
Mullens
 
W.
 
Apical ballooning in relatives
.
Heart
 
2004
;
90
:
e67.

126

Caretta
 
G
,
Robba
 
D
,
Vizzardi
 
E
,
Bonadei
 
I
,
Raddino
 
R
,
Metra
 
M.
 
Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy in two sisters: a chance finding or familial predisposition?
 
Clin Res Cardiol
 
2015
;
104
:
614
616
.

127

Dorn
 
GW
 2nd .
Adrenergic signaling polymorphisms and their impact on cardiovascular disease
.
Physiol Rev
 
2010
;
90
:
1013
1062
.

128

Zaroff
 
JG
,
Pawlikowska
 
L
,
Miss
 
JC
,
Yarlagadda
 
S
,
Ha
 
C
,
Achrol
 
A
,
Kwok
 
PY
,
McCulloch
 
CE
,
Lawton
 
MT
,
Ko
 
N
,
Smith
 
W
,
Young
 
WL.
 
Adrenoceptor polymorphisms and the risk of cardiac injury and dysfunction after subarachnoid hemorrhage
.
Stroke
 
2006
;
37
:
1680
1685
.

129

Gujja
 
KR
,
Aslam
 
AF
,
Privman
 
V
,
Tejani
 
F
,
Vasavada
 
B.
 
Initial presentation of pheochromocytoma with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a brief review of literature
.
J Cardiovasc Med
 
2010
;
11
:
49
52
.

130

Sharkey
 
SW
,
Maron
 
BJ
,
Nelson
 
P
,
Parpart
 
M
,
Maron
 
MS
,
Bristow
 
MR.
 
Adrenergic receptor polymorphisms in patients with stress (tako-tsubo) cardiomyopathy
.
J Cardiol
 
2009
;
53
:
53
57
.

131

Vriz
 
O
,
Minisini
 
R
,
Citro
 
R
,
Guerra
 
V
,
Zito
 
C
,
De Luca
 
G
,
Pavan
 
D
,
Pirisi
 
M
,
Limongelli
 
G
,
Bossone
 
E.
 
Analysis of beta1 and beta2-adrenergic receptors polymorphism in patients with apical ballooning cardiomyopathy
.
Acta Cardiol
 
2011
;
66
:
787
790
.

132

Goodloe
 
AH
,
Evans
 
JM
,
Middha
 
S
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Olson
 
TM.
 
Characterizing genetic variation of adrenergic signalling pathways in Takotsubo (stress) cardiomyopathy exomes
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2014
;
16
:
942
949
.

133

Borchert
 
T
,
Hübscher
 
D
,
Guessoum
 
CI
,
Lam
 
T-DD
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Schellinger
 
IN
,
Tiburcy
 
M
,
Liaw
 
NY
,
Li
 
Y
,
Haas
 
J
,
Sossalla
 
S
,
Huber
 
MA
,
Cyganek
 
L
,
Jacobshagen
 
C
,
Dressel
 
R
,
Raaz
 
U
,
Nikolaev
 
VO
,
Guan
 
K
,
Thiele
 
H
,
Meder
 
B
,
Wollnik
 
B
,
Zimmermann
 
W-H
,
Lüscher
 
TF
,
Hasenfuss
 
G
,
Templin
 
C
,
Streckfuss-Bömeke
 
K.
 
Catecholamine-dependent beta-adrenergic signaling in a pluripotent stem cell model of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2017
;
70
:
975
991
.

134

Lyon
 
A.
 
Stress in a dish: exploring the mechanisms of Takotsubo syndrome
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2017
;
70
:
992
995
.

135

Summers
 
MR
,
Lennon
 
RJ
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Pre-morbid psychiatric and cardiovascular diseases in apical ballooning syndrome (tako-tsubo/stress-induced cardiomyopathy): potential pre-disposing factors?
 
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2010
;
55
:
700
701
.

136

Delmas
 
C
,
Lairez
 
O
,
Mulin
 
E
,
Delmas
 
T
,
Boudou
 
N
,
Dumonteil
 
N
,
Biendel-Picquet
 
C
,
Roncalli
 
J
,
Elbaz
 
M
,
Galinier
 
M
,
Carrié
 
D.
 
Anxiodepressive disorders and chronic psychological stress are associated with Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy-new physiopathological hypothesis
.
Circ J
 
2013
;
77
:
175
180
.

137

Compare
 
A
,
Bigi
 
R
,
Orrego
 
PS
,
Proietti
 
R
,
Grossi
 
E
,
Steptoe
 
A.
 
Type D personality is associated with the development of stress cardiomyopathy following emotional triggers
.
Ann Behav Med
 
2013
;
45
:
299
307
.

138

Scantlebury
 
DC
,
Rohe
 
DE
,
Best
 
PJ
,
Lennon
 
RJ
,
Lerman
 
A
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Stress-coping skills and neuroticism in apical ballooning syndrome (Takotsubo/stress cardiomyopathy)
.
Open Heart
 
2016
;
3
:
e000312.

139

Summers
 
MR
,
Dib
 
C
,
Prasad
 
A.
 
Chronobiology of Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy (apical ballooning syndrome)
.
J Am Geriatr Soc
 
2010
;
58
:
805
806
.

140

Mausbach
 
BT
,
Dimsdale
 
JE
,
Ziegler
 
MG
,
Mills
 
PJ
,
Ancoli-Israel
 
S
,
Patterson
 
TL
,
Grant
 
I.
 
Depressive symptoms predict norepinephrine response to a psychological stressor task in Alzheimer's caregivers
.
Psychosom Med
 
2005
;
67
:
638
642
.

141

Alvarenga
 
ME
,
Richards
 
JC
,
Lambert
 
G
,
Esler
 
MD.
 
Psychophysiological mechanisms in panic disorder: a correlative analysis of noradrenaline spillover, neuronal noradrenaline reuptake, power spectral analysis of heart rate variability, and psychological variables
.
Psychosom Med
 
2006
;
68
:
8
16
.

142

Neil
 
CJ
,
Chong
 
CR
,
Nguyen
 
TH
,
Horowitz
 
JD.
 
Occurrence of Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy in association with ingestion of serotonin/noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors
.
Heart Lung Circ
 
2012
;
21
:
203
205
.

143

Scheitz
 
JF
,
Mochmann
 
HC
,
Witzenbichler
 
B
,
Fiebach
 
JB
,
Audebert
 
HJ
,
Nolte
 
CH.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy following ischemic stroke: a cause of troponin elevation
.
J Neurol
 
2012
;
259
:
188
190
.

144

Inamasu
 
J
,
Ganaha
 
T
,
Nakae
 
S
,
Ohmi
 
T
,
Wakako
 
A
,
Tanaka
 
R
,
Kuwahara
 
K
,
Kogame
 
H
,
Kawazoe
 
Y
,
Kumai
 
T
,
Hayakawa
 
M
,
Hirose
 
Y.
 
Therapeutic outcomes for patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage complicated by Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Acta Neurochir (Wien)
 
2016
;
158
:
885
893
.

145

Natelson
 
BH
,
Suarez
 
RV
,
Terrence
 
CF
,
Turizo
 
R.
 
Patients with epilepsy who die suddenly have cardiac disease
.
Arch Neurol
 
1998
;
55
:
857
860
.

146

Yoshida
 
T
,
Hibino
 
T
,
Kako
 
N
,
Murai
 
S
,
Oguri
 
M
,
Kato
 
K
,
Yajima
 
K
,
Ohte
 
N
,
Yokoi
 
K
,
Kimura
 
G.
 
A pathophysiologic study of tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy with F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography
.
Eur Heart J
 
2007
;
28
:
2598
2604
.

147

Blanc
 
C
,
Zeller
 
M
,
Cottin
 
Y
,
Daubail
 
B
,
Vialatte
 
AL
,
Giroud
 
M
,
Bejot
 
Y.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy following acute cerebral events
.
Eur Neurol
 
2015
;
74
:
163
168
.

148

Hiestand
 
T
,
Hänggi
 
J
,
Klein
 
C
,
Topka
 
MS
,
Jaguszewski
 
M
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Lüscher
 
TF
,
Jäncke
 
L
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Takotsubo Syndrome Associated With Structural Brain Alterations of the Limbic System
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2018
;
71
:
809
811
.

149

Sharkey
 
SW
,
Windenburg
 
DC
,
Lesser
 
JR
,
Maron
 
MS
,
Hauser
 
RG
,
Lesser
 
JN
,
Haas
 
TS
,
Hodges
 
JS
,
Maron
 
BJ.
 
Natural history and expansive clinical profile of stress (tako-tsubo) cardiomyopathy
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2010
;
55
:
333
341
.

150

Münzel
 
T
,
Knorr
 
M
,
Schmidt
 
F
,
von Bardeleben
 
S
,
Gori
 
T
,
Schulz
 
E
.
Airborne disease: a case of a Takotsubo cardiomyopathie as a consequence of nighttime aircraft noise exposure
.
Eur Heart J.
 
2016
;
37
:
2844
[Epub 19 July 2016].

151

Gianni
 
M
,
Dentali
 
F
,
Grandi
 
AM
,
Sumner
 
G
,
Hiralal
 
R
,
Lonn
 
E.
 
Apical ballooning syndrome or takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a systematic review
.
Eur Heart J
 
2006
;
27
:
1523
1529
.

152

Isogai
 
T
,
Yasunaga
 
H
,
Matsui
 
H
,
Tanaka
 
H
,
Ueda
 
T
,
Horiguchi
 
H
,
Fushimi
 
K.
 
Out-of-hospital versus in-hospital Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: analysis of 3719 patients in the Diagnosis Procedure Combination database in Japan
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2014
;
176
:
413
417
.

153

Tagawa
 
M
,
Nakamura
 
Y
,
Ishiguro
 
M
,
Satoh
 
K
,
Chinushi
 
M
,
Kodama
 
M
,
Aizawa
 
Y.
 
Transient left ventricular apical ballooning developing after the Central Niigata Prefecture Earthquake: two case reports
.
J Cardiol
 
2006
;
48
:
153
158
.

154

Chan
 
C
,
Elliott
 
J
,
Troughton
 
R
,
Frampton
 
C
,
Smyth
 
D
,
Crozier
 
I
,
Bridgman
 
P.
 
Acute myocardial infarction and stress cardiomyopathy following the Christchurch earthquakes
.
PLoS One
 
2013
;
8
:
e68504.

155

Butterly
 
SJ
,
Indrajith
 
M
,
Garrahy
 
P
,
Ng
 
AC
,
Gould
 
PA
,
Wang
 
WY.
 
Stress-induced takotsubo cardiomyopathy in survivors of the 2011 Queensland floods
.
Med J Aust
 
2013
;
198
:
109
110
.

156

Ghadri
 
JR
,
Sarcon
 
A
,
Diekmann
 
J
,
Bataiosu
 
DR
,
Cammann
 
VL
,
Jurisic
 
S
,
Napp
 
LC
,
Jaguszewski
 
M
,
Scherff
 
F
,
Brugger
 
P
,
Jancke
 
L
,
Seifert
 
B
,
Bax
 
JJ
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C
;
InterTAK Co-investigators
.
Happy heart syndrome: role of positive emotional stress in takotsubo syndrome
.
Eur Heart J
 
2016
;
37
:
2823
2829
.

157

Lousinha
 
A
,
Gilkeson
 
R
,
Bezerra
 
H.
 
Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction and Takotsubo syndrome
.
Rev Port Cardiol
 
2012
;
31
:
49
51
.

158

Berry
 
M
,
Roncalli
 
J
,
Lairez
 
O
,
Elbaz
 
M
,
Carrie
 
D
,
Galinier
 
M.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in a squash player
.
Cardiol Res Pract
 
2009
;
2009
:
351621.

159

Kotsiou
 
OS
,
Douras
 
A
,
Makris
 
D
,
Mpaka
 
N
,
Gourgoulianis
 
KI.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a known unknown foe of asthma
.
J Asthma
 
2017
;
54
:
880
886
.

160

Ghadri
 
JR
,
Bataisou
 
RD
,
Diekmann
 
J
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C.
 
First case of atypical takotsubo cardiomyopathy in a bilateral lung-transplanted patient due to acute respiratory failure
.
Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care
 
2015
;
4
:
482
485
.

161

Rajani
 
R
,
Przedlacka
 
A
,
Saha
 
M
,
de Belder
 
A.
 
Pancreatitis and the broken heart
.
Eur J Emerg Med
 
2010
;
17
:
27
29
.

162

Aggarwal
 
V
,
Krantz
 
MJ.
 
Migratory takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the setting of cholecystitis
.
Am J Med
 
2012
;
125
:
e5
e6
.

163

Gale
 
M
,
Loarte
 
P
,
Mirrer
 
B
,
Mallet
 
T
,
Salciccioli
 
L
,
Petrie
 
A
,
Cohen
 
R.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the setting of tension pneumothorax
.
Case Rep Crit Care
 
2015
;
2015
:
536931.

164

Elikowski
 
W
,
Kudlinski
 
B
,
Malek-Elikowska
 
M
,
Foremska-Iciek
 
J
,
Baszko
 
A
,
Skrzywanek
 
P.
 
[Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in a young woman after a traffic accident with blunt chest trauma]
.
Pol Merkur Lekarski
 
2016
;
40
:
372
376
.

165

Y-Hassan
 
S
,
Settergren
 
M
,
Henareh
 
L.
 
Sepsis-induced myocardial depression and takotsubo syndrome
.
Acute Cardiac Care
 
2014
;
16
:
102
109
.

166

Eliades
 
M
,
El-Maouche
 
D
,
Choudhary
 
C
,
Zinsmeister
 
B
,
Burman
 
KD.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy associated with thyrotoxicosis: a case report and review of the literature
.
Thyroid
 
2014
;
24
:
383
389
.

167

Smith
 
SA
,
Auseon
 
AJ.
 
Chemotherapy-induced takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Heart Fail Clin
 
2013
;
9
:
233
242, x
.

168

Modi
 
S
,
Baig
 
W.
 
Radiotherapy-induced Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol)
 
2009
;
21
:
361
362
.

169

Brezina
 
P
,
Isler
 
CM.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in pregnancy
.
Obstet Gynecol
 
2008
;
112
:
450
452
.

170

Citro
 
R
,
Lyon
 
A
,
Arbustini
 
E
,
Bossone
 
E
,
Piscione
 
F
,
Templin
 
C
,
Narula
 
J
.
Takotsubo syndrome after cesarean section: rare but possible
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2018
;
71
:
1838
1839
.

171

Dundon
 
BK
,
Puri
 
R
,
Leong
 
DP
,
Worthley
 
MI.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy following lightning strike
.
Emerg Med J
 
2008
;
25
:
460
461
.

172

Citro
 
R
,
Patella
 
MM
,
Bossone
 
E
,
Maione
 
A
,
Provenza
 
G
,
Gregorio
 
G.
 
Near-drowning syndrome: a possible trigger of tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
J Cardiovasc Med
 
2008
;
9
:
501
505
.

173

Davin
 
L
,
Legrand
 
V
,
Legrand
 
D.
 
A frozen heart
.
Eur Heart J
 
2009
;
30
:
1827.

174

Arora
 
S
,
Alfayoumi
 
F
,
Srinivasan
 
V.
 
Transient left ventricular apical ballooning after cocaine use: is catecholamine cardiotoxicity the pathologic link?
 
Mayo Clin Proc
 
2006
;
81
:
829
832
.

175

Stout
 
BJ
,
Hoshide
 
R
,
Vincent
 
DS.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the setting of acute alcohol withdrawal
.
Hawaii J Med Public Health
 
2012
;
71
:
193
194
.

176

Sarcon
 
A
,
Ghadri
 
JR
,
Wong
 
G
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C
,
Amsterdam
 
E.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy associated with opiate withdrawal
.
QJM
 
2014
;
107
:
301
302
.

177

Jung
 
YS
,
Lee
 
JS
,
Min
 
YG
,
Park
 
JS
,
Jeon
 
WC
,
Park
 
EJ
,
Shin
 
JH
,
Oh
 
S
,
Choi
 
SC.
 
Carbon monoxide-induced cardiomyopathy
.
Circ J
 
2014
;
78
:
1437
1444
.

178

Y-Hassan
 
S.
 
Clinical features and outcome of epinephrine-induced takotsubo syndrome: analysis of 33 published cases
.
Cardiovasc Revasc Med
 
2016
;
17
:
450
455
.

179

Mendoza
 
I
,
Novaro
 
GM.
 
Repeat recurrence of takotsubo cardiomyopathy related to inhaled beta-2-adrenoceptor agonists
.
World J Cardiol
 
2012
;
4
:
211
213
.

180

Margey
 
R
,
Diamond
 
P
,
McCann
 
H
,
Sugrue
 
D.
 
Dobutamine stress echo-induced apical ballooning (Takotsubo) syndrome
.
Eur J Echocardiogr
 
2009
;
10
:
395
399
.

181

Collen
 
J
,
Bimson
 
W
,
Devine
 
P.
 
A variant of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a rare complication in the electrophysiology lab
.
J Invasive Cardiol
 
2008
;
20
:
E310
E313
.

182

Patel
 
B
,
Assad
 
D
,
Wiemann
 
C
,
Zughaib
 
M.
 
Repeated use of albuterol inhaler as a potential cause of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Am J Case Rep
 
2014
;
15
:
221
225
.

183

Riera
 
M
,
Llompart-Pou
 
JA
,
Carrillo
 
A
,
Blanco
 
C.
 
Head injury and inverted Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
J Trauma
 
2010
;
68
:
E13
E15
.

184

Hjalmarsson
 
C
,
Oras
 
J
,
Redfors
 
B.
 
A case of intracerebral hemorrhage and apical ballooning: an important differential diagnosis in ST-segment elevation
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2015
;
186
:
90
92
.

185

Stiermaier
 
T
,
Moeller
 
C
,
Oehler
 
K
,
Desch
 
S
,
Graf
 
T
,
Eitel
 
C
,
Vonthein
 
R
,
Schuler
 
G
,
Thiele
 
H
,
Eitel
 
I.
 
Long-term excess mortality in takotsubo cardiomyopathy: predictors, causes and clinical consequences
.
Eur J Heart Fail
 
2016
;
18
:
650
656
.

186

Y-Hassan
 
S.
 
Clinical features and outcome of pheochromocytoma-induced Takotsubo syndrome: analysis of 80 published cases
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2016
;
117
:
1836
1844
.

187

Shoukat
 
S
,
Awad
 
A
,
Nam
 
DK
,
Hoskins
 
MH
,
Samuels
 
O.
,
Higginson
 
J
,
Clements
 
SD Jr.
 
Cardiomyopathy with inverted Tako-Tsubo pattern in the setting of subarachnoid hemorrhage: a series of four cases
.
Neurocrit Care
 
2013
;
18
:
257
260
.

188

Kagiyama
 
N
,
Okura
 
H
,
Kume
 
T
,
Hayashida
 
A
,
Yoshida
 
K.
 
Isolated right ventricular takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2015
;
16
:
285.

189

Stahli
 
BE
,
Ruschitzka
 
F
,
Enseleit
 
F.
 
Isolated right ventricular ballooning syndrome: a new variant of transient cardiomyopathy
.
Eur Heart J
 
2011
;
32
:
1821.

190

Elikowski
 
W
,
Malek
 
M
,
Lanocha
 
M
,
Wroblewski
 
D
,
Angerer
 
D
,
Kurosz
 
J
,
Rachuta
 
K.
 
[Reversible dilated cardiomyopathy as an atypical form of takotsubo cardiomyopathy]
.
Pol Merkur Lekarski
 
2013
;
34
:
219
223
.

191

Eitel
 
I
,
von Knobelsdorff-Brenkenhoff
 
F
,
Bernhardt
 
P
,
Carbone
 
I
,
Muellerleile
 
K
,
Aldrovandi
 
A
,
Francone
 
M
,
Desch
 
S
,
Gutberlet
 
M
,
Strohm
 
O
,
Schuler
 
G
,
Schulz-Menger
 
J
,
Thiele
 
H
,
Friedrich
 
MG.
 
Clinical characteristics and cardiovascular magnetic resonance findings in stress (takotsubo) cardiomyopathy
.
JAMA
 
2011
;
306
:
277
286
.

192

Ghadri
 
JR
,
Jaguszewski
 
M
,
Corti
 
R
,
Luscher
 
TF
,
Templin
 
C.
 
Different wall motion patterns of three consecutive episodes of takotsubo cardiomyopathy in the same patient
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2012
;
160
:
e25
e27
.

193

Hurst
 
RT
,
Prasad
 
A
,
Askew
 
JW
,
Sengupta
 
PP
,
Tajik
 
AJ.
 
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: a unique cardiomyopathy with variable ventricular morphology
.
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging
 
2010
;
3
:
641
649
.

194

Muller
 
JE
,
Stone
 
PH
,
Turi
 
ZG
,
Rutherford
 
JD
,
Czeisler
 
CA
,
Parker
 
C
,
Poole
 
WK
,
Passamani
 
E
,
Roberts
 
R
,
Robertson
 
T
,
Sobel
 
BE
,
Willerson
 
JT
,
Braunwald
 
E.
 
Circadian variation in the frequency of onset of acute myocardial infarction
.
N Engl J Med
 
1985
;
313
:
1315
1322
.

195

Manfredini
 
R
,
Portaluppi
 
F
,
Zamboni
 
P
,
Salmi
 
R
,
Gallerani
 
M.
 
Circadian variation in spontaneous rupture of abdominal aorta
.
Lancet
 
1999
;
353
:
643
644
.

196

Manfredini
 
R
,
Manfredini
 
F
,
Boari
 
B
,
Bergami
 
E
,
Mari
 
E
,
Gamberini
 
S
,
Salmi
 
R
,
Gallerani
 
M.
 
Seasonal and weekly patterns of hospital admissions for nonfatal and fatal myocardial infarction
.
Am J Emerg Med
 
2009
;
27
:
1097
1103
.

197

Willich
 
SN
,
Lowel
 
H
,
Lewis
 
M
,
Hormann
 
A
,
Arntz
 
HR
,
Keil
 
U.
 
Weekly variation of acute myocardial infarction. Increased Monday risk in the working population
.
Circulation
 
1994
;
90
:
87
93
.

198

Song
 
BG
,
Oh
 
JH
,
Kim
 
HJ
,
Kim
 
SH
,
Chung
 
SM
,
Lee
 
M
,
Kang
 
GH
,
Park
 
YH
,
Chun
 
WJ.
 
Chronobiological variation in the occurrence of Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy: experiences of two tertiary cardiovascular centers
.
Heart Lung
 
2013
;
42
:
40
47
.

199

Citro
 
R
,
Previtali
 
M
,
Bovelli
 
D
,
Vriz
 
O
,
Astarita
 
C
,
Patella
 
MM
,
Provenza
 
G
,
Armentano
 
C
,
Ciampi
 
Q
,
Gregorio
 
G
,
Piepoli
 
M
,
Bossone
 
E
,
Manfredini
 
R.
 
Chronobiological patterns of onset of Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy: a multicenter Italian study
.
J Am Coll Cardiol
 
2009
;
54
:
180
181
.

200

Sharkey
 
SW
,
Lesser
 
JR
,
Garberich
 
RF
,
Pink
 
VR
,
Maron
 
MS
,
Maron
 
BJ.
 
Comparison of circadian rhythm patterns in Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy versus ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2012
;
110
:
795
799
.

201

Abdulla
 
I
,
Kay
 
S
,
Mussap
 
C
,
Nelson
 
GI
,
Rasmussen
 
HH
,
Hansen
 
PS
,
Ward
 
MR.
 
Apical sparing in tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Intern Med J
 
2006
;
36
:
414
418
.

202

Manfredini
 
R
,
Citro
 
R
,
Previtali
 
M
,
Vriz
 
O
,
Ciampi
 
Q
,
Pascotto
 
M
,
Tagliamonte
 
E
,
Provenza
 
G
,
Manfredini
 
F
,
Bossone
 
E
;
Takotsubo Italian Network investigators
.
Monday preference in onset of takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Am J Emerg Med
 
2010
;
28
:
715
719
.

203

Aryal
 
MR
,
Pathak
 
R
,
Karmacharya
 
P
,
Donato
 
AA.
 
Seasonal and regional variation in Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
.
Am J Cardiol
 
2014
;
113
:
1592.

204

Eshtehardi
 
P
,
Koestner
 
SC
,
Adorjan
 
P
,
Windecker
 
S
,
Meier
 
B
,
Hess
 
OM
,
Wahl
 
A
,
Cook
 
S.
 
Transient apical ballooning syndrome–clinical characteristics, ballooning pattern, and long-term follow-up in a Swiss population
.
Int J Cardiol
 
2009
;
135
:
370
375
.

Author notes

The opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those of the Editors of the European Heart Journal or of the European Society of Cardiology.

This paper was guest edited by Bernard J. Gersh (Mayo Clinic, [email protected]).

Deceased.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact [email protected]