Cardiac involvement in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (autoimmune myositis) is important to detect because it confers an increased risk of mortality. However, detection of myocardial involvement is hampered by a lack of sensitivity of traditional non-invasive methods, and the finding of elevated cardiac troponin T levels that may be due to regenerating skeletal muscle, rather than myocardial damage. Here, we describe three cases of inflammatory myositis with elevated troponin T levels, and non-specific echocardiographic and ECG findings. Cardiac MR imaging was useful in the evaluation for the presence of myocarditis or alternative cardiac pathology.