%0 Journal Article %T Cardiac Involvement in Sarcoidosis Deaths in Wayne County, Michigan: A 20 %A Francisco Diaz %A Kyle S. Conway %A Martin Ishikawa %A Milad Webb %J Academic Forensic Pathology %@ 1925-3621 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1925362118797744 %X Sarcoidosis is a disease of unknown etiology characterized by the formation of noncaseating, nonnecrotizing granulomas in various organ systems. Reviews of 84 cases of natural death with sarcoidosis between the years 1996 and 2017 autopsied at Wayne County. The median age of decedents was 44 years (29 ¨C 59 years of age). Blacks comprised 95% of the cohort, and 52% were female. Sarcoidosis or direct sequelae were the cause of death in 79% of cases. Twenty-nine percent of patients had a documented history of sarcoidosis and 70% of patients had evidence of systemic sarcoidosis. The most common sites of involvement were lungs or hilar lymph nodes (92%), heart (45%), liver (39%), and spleen (30%). Decedents with cardiac involvement were more likely to have no documented history of sarcoidosis (87% vs. 59%, p=0.004), more likely to have died of a sarcoidosis-related cause (97% vs. 65%, p<0.001), and died at a younger mean age (41 years vs. 46 years, p=0.001). In addition, individuals with cardiac involvement commonly had concurrent multiorgan involvement including lungs (90%), lymph nodes (38%), liver (40%), spleen (32%), and kidneys (7%). Cardiac sarcoidosis is a uniquely poor prognostic factor and carries an increased risk of sudden death as shown by a disproportionate representation among medical examiner cases of sarcoidosis. Our findings suggest that approximately 40% may have asymptomatic cardiac involvement. The distribution of sarcoidosis within our cohort suggests that there is potentially a large undiagnosed and/or underdiagnosed demographic within large urban centers, such as Detroit, Michigan %K Forensic pathology %K Sarcoidosis %K Cardiac sarcoid %K Sudden death %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1925362118797744