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Coronary spasm during cardiac electrophysiological study following isoproterenol infusion
Author(s) -
Narendra Kumar,
Ismail Aksoy,
Kevin Phan,
Jindra Vainer,
Carl Timmermans
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
interventional medicine and applied science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.195
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 2061-5094
pISSN - 2061-1617
DOI - 10.1556/imas.6.2014.4.7
Subject(s) - medicine , ventricular fibrillation , cardiology , ventricular tachycardia , sudden cardiac death , cardiac electrophysiology , electrophysiology , implantable cardioverter defibrillator , fibrillation , atrial fibrillation , tachycardia , electrophysiology study , catheter ablation
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) remains the leading cause of death in industrialized world. The majority of SCD is caused by ventricular fibrillation associated with structural and/or ischemic heart disease. Ventricular fibrillation represents the final common pathway for SCD and, thus, is an attractive target for ablation. According to class I recommendation level of evidence A, an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) should be implanted for such patients [1]. Other than programmed electrical extrastimulus technique, isoproterenol infusion is commonly used in invasive cardiac electrophysiology labs for arrhythmia induction. We hereby report a rare case of transient coronary spasm during isoproterenol infusion for ventricular tachycardia induction testing.disorder is very rare and usually appears in middle aged patients. It is a clinical diagnosis. It could cause a variety of symptoms, especially, acute appendicitis and unidentified lesion in the right iliac fossa. According to the reasons, it could be just a curiosity without any relevancy or the sign of a malignant lesion with bad prognostic factors. The histopathological findings prove the origin.

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