Abstract

We report the case of a 44-year-old man referred to our institution for suspicion of arrhythmogenic right ventricular (RV) cardiomyopathy. Both familial and personal medical histories were unremarkable, except the notion of a slight unexplored heart murmur during childhood. He decided to undergo a “40s” medical checkup. On presentation to the general practitioner, he had described a slight fatigue for 8 months without concomitant stress. Physical examination revealed no abnormality. ECG showed a type I atrioventricular block and a complete right bundle-branch block (Figure 1A). Transthoracic echocardiography showed an unusual left ventricle (LV) with a leftward curveted interventricular septum (IVS) and preserved global and segmental LV systolic function, suggestive of high systolic RV pressure or takotsubo cardiomyopathy (Figure 1B and Movie I in the online-only Data Supplement). However further analysis showed normal systolic pulmonary artery pressure and LV filling pressures. The apical 4-chamber view showed an abnormal RV with an aneurysm-like shape of the basal lateral free wall (Figure 1B and Movie II in the online-only Data Supplement) but with normal kinetics. A first cardiac magnetic resonance image showed biventricular abnormalities, particularly focused on RV wall motion, which justified additional morphological investigations. No abnormal pulmonary venous return was noticed. Invasive coronary angiogram was normal. The patient was later referred to our unit by his attending cardiologist and underwent invasive hemodynamics and biventricular contrast angiography. Cardiac index (pulmonary artery thermodilution) and biventricular volumes were normal. Blood gas content analysis disclosed an intracardiac shunt. RV angiography (Figure 2A and 2B) showed a truncated RV apex and the absence of trabeculations in the anteroapical and inferoapical zones, therefore characterized by a smooth …

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