Left ventricular pseudoaneurysm (LVP) is a rare and life-threatening complication that is most often reported after myocardial infarction or cardiac surgery but can also occur after bacterial endocarditis, chest trauma, or myocardial tumor invasion [1, 2]. LVP develops when a zone of free-wall cardiac rupture is contained by the pericardium or scar tissue, without myocardial tissue involvement. Fatal rupture can be prevented by urgent surgical aneurysmectomy [3]. LVP patients treated with surgery have a mortality rate of 23%, while those treated medically die in 48% of cases [4]. To the best of our knowledge, LVP as a late complication of Takotsubo syndrome (TS) has not been described in the literature while Jaguszewski et al. reported on ventricular rupture as an early complication of TS thus confirming that this entity might not always have a benign course [5].
A 77-year-old female with a medical history of arterial hypertension, non-insulin-dependent type 2 diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, hypothyroidism, and rheumatoid arthritis presented with crushing substernal chest pain that started 5 hours earlier. Her ECG showed sinus tachycardia (104 bpm) and diffuse ST-segment elevations in the inferior and anteroseptal leads. She reported that the symptoms had started following an emotionally intense event (a large family reunion dinner). Cardioselective biomarkers were markedly high (high-sensitivity troponin I level of 4894 ng/l and N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) level of 4221 pg/ml). A diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome was made, and an urgent invasive work-up was undertaken. We performed coronary angiography with left ventriculography that revealed the akinetic/dyskinetic midsegment and apical parts of the left ventricle (LV) accompanied by apical ballooning and hyperkinesis of the basal LV segments, consistent with TS diagnosis (Figure 1, Supplementary material, Video S1), with no obstructive coronary artery disease (Figure 1B). Furthermore, a transthoracic echocardiographic examination (TTE) showed the formation of an inferoapical mural thrombus (Figure 1C, far left) and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of 42%. Thus, the patient was discharged with an oral anticoagulant in full therapeutic dose along with optimal medical therapy. Eight weeks later, the patient received a follow-up TTE that showed an increase in systolic function (LVEF, 53%) with complete resolution of the thrombus while the presence of a small inferoapical LV aneurysm was noted (Figure 1C, middle image).
Eight months after this first hospitalization, she presented again to the Emergency Department with worsening dyspnea upon minimal exertion, dry cough, and generalized weakness. Her NT-proBNP level was was 3041 pg/ml, and urgent TTE was performed. It showed a gigantic oval non-contractile structure connected to the LV via a narrow neck (Figure 1C, far right). LVEF was preserved (55%). Coronary angiography and left ventriculography were performed again — the coronary arteries were patent while ventriculography showed again the massive oval structure connected to LV via a narrow neck (Figure 1D, Supplementary material, Video S2). Cardiac magnetic resonance showed that the pseudoaneurysm wall consisted predominantly of a “sickle-like” mural thrombus up to 15 mm in size surrounded by a thin layer of visceral pericardium up to 2 mm, without perfusion, thus a diagnosis of giant LVP was made (Supplementary material, Video S3). Due to the high risk of spontaneous rupture, the patient was referred for urgent surgical aneurysmectomy that was performed by using a double-layer heterologous pericardial patch (Figure 1E). The patient was discharged six days after surgery and was followed up for one year.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available at https://journals.viamedica.pl/kardiologia_polska.
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