Abstract

Abstract Background Atrial arrhythmias occur in 10% of acute myocardial infarctions and increases incidence of death. Altered heart rhythm with brady-tachy episodes indicates sinus node dysfunction ordinarily cause by inferior myocardial infarction. Case Description A 66-year-old-man, diagnosed with 2 days onset Acute Anterior Myocardial Infarction with history of syncope after chest pain, referred with sinus arrest and junctional rhythm that changed into atrial fibrillation. During hospitalization the heart rhythm changing periodically from bradycardia to tachycardia repeatedly with witnessed new ST elevation in inferior lead before an episode of cardiac arrest. After primary PCI to the RCA as the new culprit lesion, chest pain was relieved but hemodynamic condition was not stable and the rhythm remained continuously altered. Discussion Sick sinus syndrome is a cardiac conduction disorder characterized by symptomatic dysfunction of the sinoatrial node generally manifests as sinus bradycardia, sinus arrest, or sinoatrial block, and accompanied by supraventricular tachyarrhythmias (tachy-brady syndrome). This case of acute myocardial infarction with 3 vessel diseased lesion and total occlusion in RCA affected sinoatrial node causing sick sinus syndrome. Recently multi-vessels PCI strategy increasingly recommended at the time of primary PCI for patient with arrhythmia. Conclusion A man 66 years old with acute anterior MI compelling with sick sinus syndrome on presentation because apparently the culprit lesion was RCA. Unfortunately, at that time non-IRA lesion were not opened and TPM was not available, bradycardia continues and the patient ended up being jeopardy.

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