Diagnostics (Jul 2024)

Ventricular Angiography: A Forgotten Diagnostic Tool?

  • Georgiana Pintea Bentea,
  • Brahim Berdaoui,
  • Sophie Samyn,
  • Marielle Morissens,
  • Jose Castro Rodriguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14131434
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 13
p. 1434

Abstract

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A 76-year-old male patient presented to the emergency room with acute decompensated right heart failure and presyncope episodes. Upon admission, his electrocardiogram (ECG) showed sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia at 180 bpm, which was electrically cardioverted, and the patient was subsequently admitted to the intensive care unit. The echocardiography showed a very dilated right ventricle (RV) with global systolic dysfunction and akinetic anterior and lateral walls. The coronary angiography was normal. The cardiac magnetic resonance showed signs of fibro-fatty replacement of the RV myocardium. Furthermore, the ECG after cardioversion showed inverted T waves and an epsilon wave in V1–V3 leads and late potentials by signal-averaged ECG. As such, a diagnosis of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) was suspected. However, he presented no familial history of ARVC, was 76 years of age at the time of diagnosis and was asymptomatic until now. Given these considerations, we performed a right ventricular angiography which showed dilatation of the RV with akinetic/dyskinetic bulging, creating the “pile d’assiettes” image suggestive of ARVC. In the case of this patient, the RV angiography contributed to establish a diagnosis of ARVC with a very late presentation, to our knowledge the latest presentation in terms of age described in the literature.

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