US Case of the Month - Watchers of the Walls
/The Case…
The patient is a woman in her 50s with type 2 diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, hypertension and morbid obesity who presents to the emergency department with chest pain. She reports the onset of pressure-like chest pain starting four days ago that radiates to both shoulders and is rated 10/10 in severity. The pain has been intermittent since onset, lasting for about 15 minutes at a time, exacerbated with exertion and alleviated with rest. She reports associated shortness of breath, but denies nausea, vomiting or diaphoresis. She denies any previous history of myocardial infarction, deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. She has limited mobility due to chronic back pain that has rendered her wheelchair-dependent.
The vital signs are T 36.6 C, HR 84 bpm, BP 113/67 mmHg, RR 18 bpm, SpO2 99% on ambient air. Physical exam reveals a morbidly obese female in mild respiratory distress with normal rate and rhythm, no appreciable cardiac murmurs or notable peripheral edema. There are symmetric breath sounds in bilateral lung fields without crackles.
An electrocardiogram demonstrates ST segment depressions in leads V4-V6 with associated with T-wave inversions, along with T-wave inversions in leads 1 and aVL. These changes are new from previous electrocardiogram from several months prior. Labs are notable for troponin of 6.08 and BNP 557. A transthoracic echocardiogram is obtained.
And now for the ultrasound images…
What do you see on ultrasound?
What do you see on ultrasound?
ACS evaluation
ACS evaluation
Timing
Experimental and clinical studies have demonstrated that the earliest clinical manifestation of myocardial ischemia is RWMA, followed by ECG changes and onset of anginal symptoms (Figure 1)20-22. RWMA develop within seconds of coronary artery occlusion during animal and human coronary angioplasties21,22 therefore proving that 2DTTE can be utilized immediately upon patient presentation if NSTE-ACS is suspected. Even if the patient’s symptoms resolve spontaneously in the ED or shortly after administration of analgesics, RWMA have been shown to last anywhere from one to 24 hours after resolution of anginal symptoms22-27. Moreover, as little as five minutes of coronary disruption can lead to myocardial dysfunction for up to six hours after reperfusion, indicating some degree of myocardial stunning that occurs with even transient ischemic injury 22-24. The delay in return of myocardial function may correlate with the length of anginal symptoms, degree of coronary occlusion, area of affected myocardium and presence of collateral blood flow. Thus, the highest yield of using 2DTTE to detect RWMA will be during acute symptoms, and while a negative study during active symptoms likely indicates another disease process, a negative study obtained after resolution of symptoms cannot definitively rule out NSTE-ACS 28.
Figure 1. Pathophysiologic and clinical progression of coronary ischemia. Vascular dysfunction precedes regional wall motion abnormalities, which can be apparent prior to ECG changes (Adapted from Beller, 1988)
Ultrasound Pearls
Ultrasound Pearls
Figure 2. Vascular territories on electrocardiogram matched to the corresponding Myocardial regions as seen on transthoracic echocardiogram. Views include (FroM Left to right) parasternal short, parasternal long, and apical four chamber.
Technical difficulties
Technical difficulties
Case resolution
Case resolution
Take home points
Take home points
Authored by Sim Mand, MD
Dr. Mand is a PGY3 at the University of Cincinnati Emergency Medicine residency, and will be pursuing an ultrasound fellowship.
Faculty Edits by Jessica Baez, MD
Dr. Baez is a current second year fellow and faculty at the University of Cincinnati Emergency Medicine residency.
References
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