Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine (Feb 2020)

Fitting a Square Peg in a Round Hole: A Simple Case of Chest Pain

  • Mary E. McLean,
  • Jennifer Beck-Esmay

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5811/cpcem.2019.10.44141
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1

Abstract

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A 39-year-old female presents to the emergency department with chest pain and shortness of breath. Her electrocardiogram suggests ST-elevation myocardial infarction, but she has no atherosclerotic risk factors. She is gravida 4, para 4, and four weeks postpartum from uncomplicated vaginal delivery. She is diaphoretic and anxious, but otherwise her exam is unremarkable. Cardiac enzymes are markedly elevated and point-of-care echocardiogram shows inferolateral hypokinesis and ejection fraction of 50%. In this clinicopathological case, we explore a classically underappreciated cause of acute coronary syndrome in healthy young women.