Abstract

Severe left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO) of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is an acutely life-threatening, must-not miss, cardiology emergency that infrequently presents to the emergency department (ED). Patients with this condition usually manifest chest pain, syncope, cardiogenic shock, and severe ischemia. LVOTO is easy misdiagnosed as acute coronary syndrome. In our patient, the ECG showed a significant ST-segment depression and a 0/0 mmHg blood pressure when the peak left ventricular outflow tract gradient was abruptly increased by provocable activities. However, the patient had normal coronaries on cardiac catheterization, and, upon being immediately treated with intravenous esmolol, his symptoms were relieved and blood pressure was normal after 30 minutes. This case highlights, not only that early and exact diagnosis of LVOTO is crucial, but also the importance of the therapeutic strategies used.

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