| Literature DB >> 20003367 |
Mafalda Miranda1, Pedro J Sousa, Jorge Ferreira, Maria J Andrade, Pedro A Gonçalves, Cristina Romão.
Abstract
An 80 years old man suffered a cardiac arrest shortly after arrival to his local health department. Basic Life Support was started promptly and nine minutes later, on evaluation by an Advanced Life Support team, the victim was defibrillated with a 200J shock. When orotracheal intubation was attempted, masseter muscle contraction was noticed: on reevaluation, the victim had pulse and spontaneous breathing.Thirty minutes later, the patient had been transferred to an emergency department. As he complained of chest pain, the ECG showed a ST segment depression in leads V4 to V6 and laboratory tests showed cardiac troponine I slightly elevated. A coronary angiography was performed urgently: significant left main plus three vessel coronary artery disease was disclosed.Eighteen hours after the cardiac arrest, a quadruple coronary artery bypass grafting operation was undertaken. During surgery, a fresh thrombus was removed from the middle left anterior descendent artery. Post-operative course was uneventful and the patient was discharged seven days after the procedure. Twenty four months later, he remains asymptomatic.In this case, the immediate call for the Advanced Life Support team, prompt basic life support and the successful defibrillation, altogether, contributed for the full recovery. Furthermore, the swiftness in the detection and treatment of the acute reversible cause (myocardial ischemia in this case) was crucial for long-term prognosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20003367 PMCID: PMC2797490 DOI: 10.1186/1757-7241-17-63
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Figure 1Evolution of patient's cardiac monitorization and 12 lead ECGs. A - Emergent cardiac monitoring revealing ventricular fibrillation and defibrillation with 200J. B - First 12 lead ECG after return of spontaneous circulation revealing a wide QRS tachycardia. C - Twelve lead ECG in the emergency department in sinus rhythm, heart rate of 75 bmp, right bundle branch block and ST-segment depression in leads V4-V6.
Figure 2Coronary angiography with a 50-70% stenosis in the left main coronary artery (arrow in A), occlusion in the middle left anterior descending artery (arrow in B), 90% ostial stenosis in the first diagonal (small arrow in B), 70-90% stenosis in the circumflex artery (arrow in C), and 70-90% stenosis in the middle and distal segments of right coronary artery (D).