[Coronary spasm and diffuse coronary vasoconstriction responsible for transient left ventricular insufficiency].
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Resumo
A 52 year old patient presenting with spontaneous anginal chest pain for 4 days was admitted to hospital for a more intense and prolonged chest pain associated with signs of left ventricular failure (gallop, pulmonary crepitations, hypoxemia). Coronary angiography showed marked septal hypokinesia and spontaneous localised spasm of the left anterior descending and marginal arteries with a variable degree of luminal narrowing of the other segments of these two arteries and of the right coronary artery. These changes regressed after intracoronary injection of molsidomine. The signs of left ventricular failure disappeared in 48 hours. The wall motion abnormality, monitored by 2D echocardiography, regressed slowly over 3 days. On the other hand, the electrocardiogram, which showed anterior wall subendocardial ischaemia with prolongation of the QTc interval during the spasm, remained abnormal for a long time. Therefore, in the absence of organic heart disease, coronary spasms associated with vasoconstriction can induce a sufficiently severe and durable alteration of left ventricular function to create clinical signs of cardiac failure and profound and prolonged ST-T wave changes on the electrocardiogram.