Vasospasm occurs as a consequence of focal cardiomyocyte degeneration in sarcoglycan deficiency. (A) Evidence for focal cardiomyocyte damage leading to coronary vasospasm. EBD uptake appears pale blue at gross examination and is seen in a heart from a γ-sarcoglycan–deficient animal (left, demarcated by arrowheads). Microvascular filling in the same heart (left, orange, and right) shows evidence of vasospasm with focal narrowings (arrows) and poor perfusion of the area that has taken up EBD. (B) Diagram of cardiomyocyte degeneration and vasospasm. Disruption of the sarcoglycan complex through gene mutation causes loss of the sarcoglycan complex at the membrane in cardiomyocytes and impairs the function of the dystrophin glycoprotein mechanosignaling complex. The early marker of degeneration in cardiomyocytes, EBD uptake (blue cardiomyocytes in schematic), indicates the active disruption and degenerative changes in the cardiomyocyte due to loss of sarcoglycan in cardiomyocyte sarcolemma. Coronary vessels, in proximity to the areas of local cardiomyocyte degeneration, undergo vasospasm (red arrows, right) due to local changes in the surrounding myocardium (solid arrow). Transient ischemia downstream of these events may lead to further degeneration within the myocardium (dashed arrow).