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It is now 30 years since Japanese investigators first described Takotsubo Syndrome (TTS) as a disorder occurring mainly in ageing women, ascribing it to the impact of multivessel coronary artery spasm During the intervening period, it has become clear that TTS involves relatively transient vascular injury, followed by prolonged myocardial inflammatory and eventually fibrotic changes Hence symptomatic recovery is generally slow, currently an under-recognised issue It appears that TTS is induced by aberrant post-β2-adrenoceptor signalling in the setting of “surge” release of catecholamines Resultant activation of nitric oxide synthases and increased inflammatory vascular permeation lead to prolonged myocardial infiltration with macrophages and associated oedema formation Initially, the diagnosis of TTS was made via exclusion of relevant coronary artery stenoses, plus the presence of regional left ventricular hypokinesis However, detection of extensive myocardial oedema on cardiac MRI imaging offers a specific basis for diagnosis No adequate methods are yet available for definitive diagnosis of TTS at hospital presentation Other major challenges remaining in this area include understanding of the recently demonstrated association between TTS and antecedent cancer, the development of effective treatments to reduce risk of short-term (generally due to shock) and long-term mortality, and also to accelerate symptomatic recovery
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