Abstract
Abstract A 71-year-old woman, known to have a non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy with reduced ejection fraction (EF), and a previous transcatheter edge-to-edge mitral valve repair (MitraClip), was admitted after a routine echocardiogram showing new onset multiple, highly mobile, left ventricle (LV) masses. The patient, fully vaccinated against Sars-Cov-2, experienced a paucisymptomatic COVID-19 infection 1 month before, followed by a full recovery. A transthoracic echocardiogram performed 3 months before showed no LV masses. On admission she was completely asymptomatic with no clinical signs of heart failure or systemic embolization. A multimodality imaging evaluation (contrast ecocardiography, cardiac computed tomography, cardiac magnetic resonance) confirmed a severe dilation of the LV with severe EF reduction, and 3 mobile LV masses; the largest mass was adhered to the middle portion of the anterolateral wall (maximum diameter 49×15 mm). mm). A diagnostic endomyocardial biopsy and cardiac surgery were excluded due to prohibitive embolic/procedural risk and an anticoagulant treatment with warfarin was started with a progressive reduction of the masses’ dimension at transthoracic echocardiography. Thus, a diagnosis of exclusion of LV thrombosis was made. After 2-week a complete resolution of the masses was documented with no clinical or embolic events. Cardiovascular complications of the coronavirus disease have been documented both in the acute phase and in convalescence; one such complication is the formation of LV thrombus; the pro-thrombotic nature of COVID-19 infection is well known: the coagulation activation mechanism is currently uncler, but it might be correlated to excessive inflammation, COVID-induced hypoxia, direct cytopathic effects on the cardiac endothelial cells, immobilization. This case demonstrates how vulnerable patients, i.e. those with heart failure, may experience thrombotic complications following non-severe COVID-19 infection and despite having completed the vaccine course. Although currently unconfirmed by dedicated clinical trials, more assiduous echocardiographic monitoring could yield a benefit in selected patients; current guidelines do not support the use of anticoagulation prophylaxis for non-severe COVID.19, but further studies regarding anticoagulant prophylaxis for COVID-19 patients with chronic heart diseases, including DCM, are warranted.
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