ST-Segment elevation: Not always

AuthorÉrico Costaen
AuthorElsa Meirelesen
AuthorCatarina Rodriguesen
AuthorTiago Godinho Teixeiraen
AuthorDulce Silvaen
Issued Date2017-01-31en
AbstractCardiac tumors can be primary or metastatic, the latter being more frequent and usually of pulmonary or hematologic origin. These patients’ clinical signs are non-specific and the electrocardiogram (ECG) can assume many patterns, among which, ST-segment elevation. Nevertheless, associated occlusion of the coronary arteries is rare in these situations. We present a 79-year-old woman with a history of pulmonary neoplasia who was admitted to the emergency department due to prolonged atypical chest pain, cough and worsening dyspnea in the previous 3 days. The ECG revealed an ST-segment elevation in the lateral leads, despite normal blood work, with only residually elevated troponin I. Due to the disparity between the patient’s symptoms and the ECG findings, a decision was made not to proceed to primary angioplasty, but to further investigate with echocardiography, which revealed a mass localized in the anterolateral and inferolateral left ventricle walls, confirmed by computed tomography. The patient was admitted in the medical ward for symptomatic management. Her clinical condition gradually deteriorated due to the disease’s natural evolution and she died two weeks later. This case highlights the importance to keep in mind differential diagnoses to acute coronary syndromes, when a ST-segment elevation is encountered on a ECG.en
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.21859/ijcp-020102en
KeywordCardiac Metastasisen
KeywordST-segment Elevationen
PublisherBrieflandsen
TitleST-Segment elevation: Not alwaysen
TypeCase Reporten

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