Monaldi Archives for Chest Disease (Mar 2021)

Takotsubo syndrome and pheochromocytoma: an insidious combination

  • Stefano Maffè,
  • Pierfranco Dellavesa,
  • Paola Paffoni,
  • Luca Bergamasco,
  • Marisa Arrondini,
  • Stefano Valentini,
  • Emanuela Facchini,
  • Eleonora Prenna,
  • Lara Baduena,
  • Giulia Careri,
  • Nicolò Franchetti Pardo,
  • Umberto Parravicini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/monaldi.2021.1711

Abstract

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Pheochromocytoma is a rare adrenal tumor characterized by the secretion of catecholamines and vasoactive peptides. It can cause a catecholaminergic storm and lead to acute coronary syndromes. We present the case of a 53-year-old man, without any medical history, who arrived to the hospital following a spinal trauma due a fall. He presents back and retrosternal pain, with a clinical status of acute pulmonary edema, sinus tachycardia with left bundle branch block, left ventricular apical ballooning with depressed systolic function. Blood tests show a very important increase of Troponin and transaminases. A contrast chest-abdomen CT highlighted a right adrenal solid mass, with a diameter of 78mm, partial capsular laceration, compression of the inferior vena cava and the hepatic parenchyma. The clinical condition of the patient rapidly worsens from a respiratory and hemodynamic point of view, with cardiogenic shock, anuria and sepsis, refractory to all the medical treatments, until the patient died. The autopsy confirmed that the abdominal mass was a pheochromocytoma, broken after the trauma suffered. The resulting catecholaminergic storm caused a myocardial ischemia with Takotsubo syndrome, with cardiogenic shock. This unfortunate case confirms the pheochromocytoma as important risk factor for the onset of Takotsubo syndrome, and the how dramatic and severe a catecholaminergic storm can be.

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