| Literature DB >> 29768378 |
Qiongying Wang1, Heng Yu, Cheng Jiang, Runmin Sun, Miaomiao Qi, Shougang Sun, Guangli Xu, Hongbin Cai, Zhenchang Zhang, Feng Zhao, Xiaoqing Kou, Jing Yu, Feng Bai.
Abstract
RATIONALE: The typical symptoms of stress cardiomyopathy include sudden-onset chest pain and breathlessness or collapse as well as classical symptoms of cardiovascular disease; however, rare reports have described nervous system symptoms as the initial manifestation. Here, we report the case of a young man who presented with a large cerebral infarction as the main clinical symptom of stress cardiomyopathy to increase recognition of the disease. PATIENT CONCERNS: A 28-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for sudden-onset weakness of the right limbs and unconsciousness for 1 day. Ten days prior, he began consuming copious amounts of alcohol (500 mL/day) secondary to reactive depression. DIAGNOSES: Imaging revealed a left internal carotid artery occlusion as assessed by carotid artery ultrasonography. Brain magnetic resonance imaging/magnetic resonance angiography showed new large left cerebral infarction complicated by a reperfusion injury. Moreover, cardiac ultrasonography showed decreased motion of the left ventricular apex, a 3.7 cm mural thrombus in the ventricular apex. The results of coronary and renal artery angiography did not reveal any significant epicardial coronary disease with thrombolysis in the myocardial infarction grade 3 in any of the coronary arteries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29768378 PMCID: PMC5976334 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000010804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Figure 1Carotid ultrasonography and cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). (A) Left carotid artery was occluded and lacked blood flow; (B) Blood flow signals not detected in the left carotid artery; (C) Cranial MRI showing a new large cerebral infarction in the left hemisphere; (D, E) The left internal carotid artery is occluded, right internal carotid artery supplies compensatory blood to the left anterior cerebral artery and middle cerebral artery through the anterior communicating artery, and distal branches of the left middle cerebral artery are poorly visualized.
Figure 2Changes in the apical thrombus visible on echocardiography.