Abstract

No abstract available. Manuscript truncated after 150 words. A 54-year-old man with a complex cardiac history, including Tetralogy of Fallot requiring Blalock-Taussig shunt in infancy, infundibular patch repair at age 7, and bioprosthetic tricuspid valve replacement at age 52, had ongoing frequent hospitalizations with decompensated right ventricular heart failure secondary to native pulmonary valve mixed stenosis plus regurgitation and left pulmonary artery stenosis. His case was further complicated by his history of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) with recurrent epistaxis and recent GI bleeds with multiple angiodysplastic lesions throughout the stomach, duodenum, and descending colon which were previously treated with argon plasma coagulation. The patient was admitted to our hospital in NYHA class IV heart failure receiving a continuous dopamine infusion and aggressive diuresis. Upon admission, a right heart catheterization demonstrated severe pulmonary valve regurgitation, left pulmonary artery stenosis, and systemic hypoxemia suggestive of an intrapulmonary shunt. Admission transthoracic echocardiogram demonstrated normal left ventricular ejection fraction of 55-60%, a …

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