Heart failure remains the main cause of death in ß-thalassemia despite the progress that has been made. Myocardial Heart failure remains the main cause of death in β-thalassemia, despite the progress that has been made by intensification of iron chelation therapy. 1 It has been traditionally considered the result of iron overload due to regular blood transfusions, intestinal iron hyperabsorption, and ineffective erythropoiesis during a patient's lifespan. 2,3 Regular, intense chelation therapy has improved quality of life and the survival rate by decreasing the secondary hemochromatosis. However, heart failure is not prevented by intensification of iron chelation therapy. 4,5 It can thus be hypothesized that either deferoxamine is less effective than is believed or other factors might be involved in the pathogenesis of the heart failure.Beta-thalassemia is not a pure iron storage disease and the pathophysiology of cardiac dysfunction is poorly understood and multifactorial in etiology. 6,7 Left-sided and subsequently biventricular heart failure appear early in the patients' life. This is the most common mode of heart failure in this disease, which is characterized at diagnosis by left ventricular systolic dysfunction, dilatation, and failure. 2,[8][9][10] Chronic myocardial iron deposition does not affect left ventricular relaxation but causes left ventricular myocardial restriction, with highly elevated pulmonary arteriolar resistance and pressure. It appears in the elderly β-thalassemia major population, who have the highest serum ferritin levels. These patients eventually develop right ventricular dilatation, while left ventricular dimensions and systolic function remain within the normal range. This is the pre-heart failure stage, with predominant symptoms and signs of right-sided heart failure. 11 In 1964, Engle et al. 8 first reported the coexistence of pericarditis and fatal arrhythmias with heart failure in β-thalassemia major. Of note, pericarditis usually coincides to some degree with myocarditis, an inflammatory heart disease that usually has an immunologic background. 2,12,13 Years later, our group 14 showed that acute infectious myocarditis in β-thalassemia major, in addition to causing acute failure, also caused chronic leftsided heart failure in 27.6% of myocarditis patients within approximately 3.5 years, compared to an ageand sex-matched β-thalassemic population with no difference in iron loading. The estimated prevalence of overt myocarditis in β-thalassemia was 4.5% in a population with clinical evidence of myopericarditis documented mainly by myocardial biopsy.