Turkish Journal of Anaesthesiology and Reanimation (Jun 2023)

Positive Bubble Study But No Evidence of Interatrial Defect in a Patient with Recurrent Cryptogenic Stroke

  • Nika Samadzadeh Tabrizi,
  • Perry A. Stout,
  • Joseph Cahill,
  • Imran Ramzan Sunesara,
  • Patrick Chan,
  • Chanderdeep Singh,
  • Thomas Fabian,
  • Alexander D. Shapeton,
  • Sridhar Reddy Musuku

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4274/TJAR.2022.221106
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 3
pp. 271 – 274

Abstract

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Pulmonary arteriovenous malformations (PAVMs) can be asymptomatic or result in a range of complications such as brain abscesses or cryptogenic emboli, which can contribute to morbidity and mortality if not diagnosed and treated in a timely manner. To date, there have been several reports of delayed diagnosis of PAVMs, which have been largely attributed to the misconception that PAVMs are too rare to be of clinical significance. Furthermore, because intracardiac shunting secondary to a patent foramen ovale (PFO) or atrial septal defect (ASD) also results in a positive saline contrast study with echocardiography, PAVM can be easily misdiagnosed as an intracardiac right-toleft shunt. However, there are unique echocardiographic features that differentiate between intracardiac shunting due to a PFO or ASD and extracardiac shunting such as in PAVM. This case details the course of a patient with recurrent cryptogenic strokes that was initially misattributed to a PFO and was only correctly diagnosed with multiple PAVMs after two failed attempts at PFO closure. This case serves as a reminder of an alternative etiology of right-to-left shunt and its presentation on imaging, which echocardiographers must be familiar with.

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