Cardiology is the medical specialty focused on the heart and the cardiovascular system. It involves the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of conditions affecting the heart and blood vessels. These conditions include coronary artery disease, heart failure, arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats), and valve disorders. The field covers a broad spectrum, from congenital heart defects present at birth to acquired conditions like heart attacks.
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
Treating inflammatory heart disease is a balance between fighting the cause (like a virus or bacteria) and supporting the heart while it heals. The approach depends entirely on which layer of the heart is affected and how severe the damage is. Some patients receive treatment as simple as taking anti-inflammatory pills at home. For others, it requires weeks of hospital care, intravenous drugs, or even surgery.
Rehabilitation is a critical phase. Unlike a muscle strain, where you can “work through the pain,” an inflamed heart needs rest. Returning to activity too soon can trigger a relapse or permanent damage. The recovery timeline is dictated by how fast the inflammation clears and how much strength the heart muscle has lost. This section breaks down the medical strategies and the recovery roadmap.
For pericarditis, the goal is to stop the pain and inflammation. The first line of defense is usually high-dose nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like ibuprofen or aspirin. These are taken for several weeks and tapered off slowly.
Often, a drug called colchicine is added. Originally used for gout, colchicine has been proven to significantly reduce the risk of pericarditis coming back. For recurrent or stubborn cases, steroids (prednisone) or newer immunosuppressing drugs might be used. A procedure known as pericardiocentesis is performed to remove a significant amount of fluid that has accumulated around the heart using a needle.
There is no specific “cure” for viral myocarditis; the body must fight the virus. Treatment focuses on supporting the heart while it is weak. This includes standard heart failure medications like beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors to lower blood pressure and reduce the heart’s workload. Diuretics help remove excess fluid.
The most important “drug” for myocarditis is rest. Patients are usually restricted from competitive sports or heavy exercise for 3 to 6 months. In severe cases (fulminant myocarditis), patients may need mechanical support in the hospital, such as a balloon pump or ECMO (a machine that pumps blood for the heart), to keep them alive until the inflammation subsides.
Endocarditis is an infection, so antibiotics are the cure. Because the bacteria are hidden deep inside clumps on the valves, high-dose intravenous (IV) antibiotics are needed for a long time—typically 4 to 6 weeks. This process usually starts in the hospital, but stable patients can often finish the course at home with a PICC line (a long-term IV).
Surgery is required in about half of all cases. If the infection destroys the valve, causes heart failure, or creates a large abscess, surgeons must go in to remove the infected tissue and replace the valve. Surgery is also needed if there is a stroke.
Inflammation can leave scars. In pericarditis, scarring can lead to constrictive pericarditis, where the sac hardens and squeezes the heart. The only cure is a surgery called pericardiectomy to strip away the hardened sac.
In myocarditis, scarring can lead to dilated cardiomyopathy, where the heart stays enlarged and weak. This requires lifelong heart failure management and occasionally an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) to prevent sudden death from arrhythmia. The main complication is valve failure, which requires lifelong monitoring of the replaced or repaired valve.
Once the acute phase is over, cardiac rehabilitation is often recommended. This is a medically supervised program of exercise and education. It helps patients regain confidence in their bodies.
For someone who has been afraid to move because of heart pain, rehab provides a safe environment to start exercising again while hooked up to a heart monitor. The team teaches energy conservation techniques and helps rebuild muscle strength lost during bed rest. It also provides emotional support, which is vital after a scary cardiac event.
Recovery is not the final step. Patients need regular follow-up with a cardiologist. This typically involves repeat echocardiograms to check heart function and valve health. Holter monitors might be used to check for irregular rhythms.
For young athletes recovering from myocarditis, a strict “return to play” protocol is followed. They must pass a battery of tests—including stress tests and MRI—before being cleared to return to the field. This precaution saves lives by ensuring that the inflammation completely disappears before the heart reaches its limit.
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Alp Burak Çatakoğlu
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Enis Oğuz
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Gökhan Ertaş
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Kadriye Kılıçkesmez
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Yelda Tayyareci
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Spec. MD. Barış Güven
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Assoc. Prof. MD. Çiğdem İleri Doğan
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Prof. MD. Batur Gönenç Kanar
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Prof. MD. Mehmet Vefik Yazıcıoğlu
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Spec. MD. Utku Zor
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Assoc. Prof. MD. Ahmet Anıl Şahin
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Hasan Turhan
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Spec. MD. Ali Yıldırım
Pediatric Cardiology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Spec. MD. Selim Yazıcı
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Assoc. Prof. MD. Sinem Özbay Özyılmaz
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Asst. Prof. MD. Enes Alıç
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Prof. MD. Hakan Uçar
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Prof. MD. Murat Sünbül
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Prof. MD. Mustafa Kürşat Tigen
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Prof. MD. Tolga Aksu
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Assoc. Prof. MD. Alper Canbay
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Assoc. Prof. MD. Sezen Bağlan Uzunget
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Asst. Prof. MD. Savaş Açıkgöz
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Prof. MD. Aytun Çanga
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Prof. MD. Murat Tulmaç
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Onur Yıldırım
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Prof. MD. Selim Topcu
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Spec. MD. Mehmet Boyunsuz
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Samsun
Asst. Prof. MD. Yunus Amasyalı
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Samsun
Spec. MD. Baran Yüksekkaya
Cardiology
Assoc. Prof. MD. Mahmut Özdemir
Cardiology
Asst. Prof. MD. Kıvanç Eren
Cardiology
Spec. MD. Perviz Caferov
Cardiology
Liv Hospital Ulus + Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Assoc. Prof. MD. Meki Bilici
Pediatric Cardiology
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
No. Antibiotics kill bacteria, not viruses. Taking them for a viral infection is useless and can be harmful. However, if the myocarditis is caused by bacteria (like Lyme disease), then antibiotics are the correct treatment.
You will likely stay for at least a week or two to stabilize the infection and ensure the antibiotics are working. If you need surgery, the stay will be longer. Many patients complete the 6-week antibiotic course at home with visiting nurses.
Most people do not need surgery. Medication works very well. For chronic, constrictive cases where the heart sac has calcified and is crushing the heart, surgery (pericardiectomy) is the final resort.
Recurrence is relatively rare (about 10-15%), but it can happen. It is more likely if the underlying cause is autoimmune (like sarcoidosis or giant cell myocarditis) rather than a one-time virus.
Alcohol can weaken the heart muscle and interact with medications. It is best to avoid it completely during the acute recovery phase of myocarditis or pericarditis to give your heart the best chance to heal.
BlogCardiologyMar 05, 2026Pericarditis is a condition where the sac around the heart gets inflamed. It affects thousands of people gl...
BlogCardiologyMar 04, 2026Myocarditis is a serious condition where the heart muscle gets inflamed. Inflammation of the heart muscle c...
BlogCardiologyApr 27, 2026Discover the causes and solutions for that unsettling air bubble sensation in your chest. Our experts expla...
BlogCardiologyMar 11, 2026Viral cardiomyopathy is a serious condition where the heart muscle gets inflamed from a virus. About 1 in 1...
BlogCardiologyMar 13, 2026Myocarditis is when the heart muscle gets inflamed. It can be serious and often starts with viral infection...
BlogCardiologyMar 11, 2026Kawasaki disease is a serious condition that affects children. It causes inflammation in the blood vessels ...
Get instant answers from our medical team. No forms, no waiting — just tap below to start chatting now.
Start Chat on WhatsApp or call us at +90 530 174 28 17