Myocarditis is a poorly understood condition and its prevalence is largely underestimated. A significant proportion of cases may be subclinical and chronic, leading to dilated cardiomyopathy, which represents the first cause of heart transplantation worldwide. Although inflammation of the myocardium can be associated with various causes, particularly viruses, myocarditis is usually idiopathic. Present evidence suggests that some 'idiopathic' and chronic 'postviral' myocarditis cases may be autoimmune, whereas others with acute self-limited disease or with persisting pathogenic virus by molecular methods may represent viral myocarditis. The major obstacle in identifying a specific therapy in myocarditis lies in the difficulty of a thorough clinical characterisation of individual patients in relation to viral and autoimmune involvement. This also explains the inconclusive results of trials of immunosuppressive drugs in myocarditis/dilated cardiomyopathy. Diagnosis is based upon endomyocardial biopsy. Management of myocarditis requires avoidance of agents that exacerbate myocarditis or depress myocardial function, and conventional therapy for heart failure (diuretics, ACE inhibitors and, if indicated, digoxin) and arrhythmias. Although at present the use of immunosuppressive therapy cannot be recommended on a routine basis, the recent Myocarditis Treatment Trial, where an aetiologically heterogeneous patient population was treated without significant adverse effects, provides some rationale for applying the same immunosuppression protocol to selected patients, e.g. those with active biopsy-proven myocarditis, unresponsive to conventional therapy, prior to transplantation, and those with idiopathic giant cell myocarditis.