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Welcome to you, interested in ARVCs which represents a wide spectrum of diseases poorly recognised diagnosed and treated.
This is related to the complexity of this new category of cardiomyopathies in which some have been known under a different name.
Nowadays, I think it is timely to put them in the same basket under the name of "ARVCs" to concentrate the expertise of many investigators interested in only one aspect of these diseases which have more or less some features in common the first being that they are involving the Right Ventricle !

Being also the founder of the unique style of Calligraphic Painting and Drawing I have illustrated this blog with some of my 2300 recorded pieces of art.

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Overview of Terminology : ARVC ARVD and ARVCs

This text on the definition of terms used in this blog is (modified from my Editorial "The multiple facets of Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathies " published in the European Heart Journal,  Volume 30, 9 May 2011) :

Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD) was the term originally used to identify a new cardiac entity characterized by right ventricular arrhythmias and juvenile sudden death. Recognition of this disease was the result of the investigation of a group of patients who had no cardiac abnormalities on physical examination but developed episodic right ventricular tachycardia. Treatment by open chest ventriculotomy was successful in preventing recurrent ventricular tachycardia. Other terminology has subsequently been used to describe this disease, including ARVC/D, which was included in the new classification of cardiomyopathies in 1996.  Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is also employed to describe this entity. The original term of arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (or dystrophy) was chosen because sections of the right ventricle during surgery showed a marked decrease in muscle thickness covered by a large amount of fat, suggesting a defect in development. This inference was also made by Henry Uhl in his description of his eponym case. It was impossible for pathologists to identify the disease with certainty because fat without fibrosis is frequently observed in the free wall of the right ventricle, a feature unique to the human species.  Due to advances in molecular biology, this developmental defect consisting of an increased amount of adipocytes and interstitial fibrosis replacing cardiomyocytes starting in the embryo and progressing during adolescence and adulthood has been partially elucidated.

To be more precise we have to concentrate on the litteral roots of the terms used in he first description of what I called with Pr Frank Marcus who spent a sabbatical year in my department at Hopital Jean Rostand in 1980.

Plasia is a latin term which means fabrication. the equivalent term with a Geek root wuold have been Dystrophy....