Decision making in a presumptive case of STEMI-like myocarditis
2015
In youngmales, differential diagnosis during chest pain is not always
easy. When ECG findings suggest a cardiac origin of such symptoms,
myo-pericarditis is usually themost likely hypothesis, beingmore common
than Acute Coronary Syndromes (ACS) in the first decades of life
[1]. In the presence of ST segment elevation, Troponin release and ventricular
wall motion abnormalities, the diagnosis can be challenging,
though. In the young a lowcoronary risk profile and atypical symptoms
seldom support a working diagnosis of Coronary Heart Disease (CHD),
and, therefore, urgent coronary angiography is not recommended routinely,
although cases of early ACS are not so rare. In October 2014 a
26-year-old man was admitted to our ICCU for chest pain, started 2 h
earlier, radiating to the left shoulder and changing with position.
The young man used to practice sports regularly and adhere to a
hyperprotein diet. No history of traditional cardiovascular risk factor
was present, excluding cigarette smoke. Two weeks before a selflimiting
fever had occurred. Family history was negative for cardiovascular
diseases. At presentation a 12-leads ECG was registered, showing
concave ST segment elevation in V1–V5 without reciprocal ST segment
depression, and negative asymmetric Twaves in inferior leads (Fig. 1). A
blood sample collected 30 min earlier showed no increase in troponin
levels, 13,000white blood cells/mm3 and high C-reactive protein levels.
Echocardiography revealed a mild systolic dysfunction with a mild
hypokinesia of anterior mid-septal and periapical segments, without
pericardial effusion. During the acquisition of the images, the patient became
more diaphoretic and chest pain tended to increase. Albeit the initial
hypothesis of a STEMI-like myocarditis, in the raising clinical
suspicion of an ACS the patient was pre-treated with aspirin, a loading
dose of prasugrel and unfractionated heparin, and referred to the cath
lab for an urgent coronary angiography, which showed a proximal occlusion
of Left Anterior Descending Artery (LAD)with a high thrombotic load (Fig. 2), treatedwith thrombus aspiration followed by coronary angioplasty
and drug-eluting stent placement on the underlying coronary
plaque, accounting for around 80% of the LAD lumen, achieving a TIMI 3
flow. The patient was post-treated with abciximab bolus plus infusion.
No other coronary lesionswere detected. During hospital stay, coagulation
factors' analysis unveiled a moderate reduction in the activity of
Protein C and Protein S, while the use of multiple antiplatelet agents
in the acute and post-acute phases didn't allow the performance of
platelet functionality tests. Genetic characterization is still ongoing.
CHD is known to be one of the main causes of hospital admission in
Western Countries, and acute coronary syndromes are the leading cause
of death in this context. Though AcuteMyocardial Infarction is rather infrequent
in the young, in the Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events
(GRACE) Study 6.3% of ACS occurred in this sub-population [2], and
the same datawere confirmed in several registries [3]. Clinical presentation
of ACS in this context is often atypical, and a low-cardiovascularrisk
profile makes the diagnosis of CAD even more unlikely, given a
higher incidence ofmyocardial inflammatory diseases in the same population.
One of the electrocardiographic markers which has been
deemed to be able to discriminate amyocarditis froma STEMI is ST segment
elevation without reciprocal ST depression [4], but sensitivity and
specificity of such sign are not well established, and its poor diagnostic
performance arises the risk of a missed diagnosis, as shown by our
case. On the other hand, segmental abnormalities of left ventricular
wall motion are not peculiar of ACS, given the possibility of a spotty distribution
ofmyocarditis impairing segmental and global ventricularmotion
[5,6]. All these overlapping features create a gray area in which the
only possibility to distinguish a myocarditis from a STEMI in the acute
setting is given by coronary angiography, which may be performed urgentlywhen
ECG findings are not able to exclude an ongoing ACS, being
the time spent to get to a right diagnosis related to a quantity of muscle
that is going to be irreversibly lost. Nevertheless, there are not clear indications
for the management of young patientswith chest painwhen a
myocarditis seems to be the most likely diagnosis, but an ACS cannot be
excluded. Current guidelines on ACS specifically address the issues of
atypical clinical presentations and management strategies in the elderly
[7], while only a few data are available for younger patients, and the
clinical management is left to the experience of the single operator.
Thus, the clinical issue is all about which cases should be addressed
for an urgent coronary angiography, between the risk to incur in an untreated
STEMI and the risks related to a useless hearth cath. Coronary
thrombosis is deemed to be more likely if an underlying hypercoagulability
state exists, i.e., given by protein C or protein S deficiency [8], but these data are usually unavailable at the time of clinical presentation.
Smoking is the most common risk factor for an early AMI [5], and in
57% of such patients a single vessel coronary artery disease has been
demonstrated [9]. The importance of cigarette smoke and unhealthy
habits has been stressed previously [10], and although mid- and longterm
outcomes are usually better in comparison to the elderly [8,9],
smokers still suffer froma lower survival [10]. Probably, young smokers
are a subpopulation in which the possibility of an ACS should always be
considered. The presence of fever or infection in the recent past may be
of some help, but is not always per se able to discriminate inflammatory
from a thrombotic origin of symptoms. The diagnostic performances
of ECG and echocardiography in the acute setting, in this peculiar clinical
context, are probably much lower than we all are used to. The
absence of clear indications implicates a lack of homogeneity in the
management of young patients with cardiac chest pain, and creates situations
inwhich clinical intuition is the only available tool for clinicians,
advocating a standardization of procedures and therapies in the special
context of the young, as it's usually done for many other specific population
subsets.
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