Possible causes of specific cardiac muscle disease, diagnosis, follow-up and the therapeutic management are discussed on the basis of a series of cases. 8 out of 30 patients who showed the clinical picture of dilative cardiomyopathy (DCM) were found to have a specific cardiac muscle disease. 4 patients had DCM following adriamycin therapy. Fibromuscular dysplasia with renal hypertension, thalassaemia major with secondary haemosiderosis, long-overlooked and untreated athyroidism each caused one case of dilative specific cardiac muscle disease. Once DCM was preceded by the Kawasaki syndrome for over 2 years. Amongst 47 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy there were two children who had undergone ACTH treatment, 6 children born of diabetic mothers, 4 cases of Pompe's disease, and one patient with hypothyroidism resulting in reversible hypertrophy of the cardiac muscle. Different neurodegenerative diseases were associated with cardiac muscle disease in 4 cases, partly dictating the clinical course. Extremely rare was the development over 6 years of cardiac hypertrophy following a burns injury.