Abstract Chronic Chagas disease cardiomyopathy (CCC) is a result of low-intensity, but incessant, focal fibrosing myocarditis, caused by persistent T. cruzi infection associated with inflammation, mediated by adverse immune mechanisms. About 30 percent of infected individuals have developed throughout life the chronic cardiac form of Chagas’ disease with protean clinical manifestations, such as sudden death, signs and symptoms of heart failure, cardioembolic events, arrhythmia and angioid symptoms. Sudden death and the progression of heart failure (HF) are the most common […]