Abstract

Abstract A 52–year–old man arrived at the local emergency room for worsening dyspnea and asthenia, present for about a month, but significantly worsening during the night of the access. The ECG (Figure 1) revealed complete AtrioVentricular Block (ABV) with a narrow–QRS junctional escape rhythm, with a heart rate of about 30 beats per minute (bpm). The other vital parameters were within the normal limits and no anomalies were detected on the physical examination. Medium–dose intravenous isoprenaline infusion was immediately started, with an increase in the junctional escape rate up to 50 bpm. The patient also underwent chest x–ray, which showed interstitial thickening in the pulmonary hilus, which was judged to be nonspecific. The blood chemistry was normal and the echocardiogram (Figure 2) did not show any abnormalities. Since there were no apparent reversible causes of the complete AV block, on the next day, a bicameral pacemaker was implanted via the left cephalic vein. The procedure was uneventful and the patient was discharged home two days later, in good general condition. Eight days after the discharge, surgical wound control and pacemaker control were performed, with completely normal parameters. About 15 days after the discharge the patient went back to the local emergency room for dyspnea and fever. Chest Computed Tomography (CT) without contrast medium was performed, which revealed the presence of widespread pathological mediastinal lymphadenopathy. Therefore, the patient was admitted to the internal medicine ward. An in–depth diagnostic was performed first with thoraco–abdominal angio–CT, then with Positron Emission Tomography (PET)–CT (see Figure 3), which revealed the presence of diffuse areas of fixation of the radio–drug (18F–Fluorodeoxyglucose –FDG–), at the ilo–mediastinal, hepatic, pulmonary, retrocrural, retrocaval, iliac, supra and subclavicular, and also cardiac area (activation of interatrial brown fat and between aortic root and the superior vena cava). The patient was therefore transferred to another hospital for diagnostic investigations and lymphoma therapy. In the light of the picture that emerged, the arrhythmological disease was considered to be referred to the cardiac involvement of the oncological disease; to date there are few similar cases described in the literature. Legend of the figures: Figure 1: ECG at the admission Figura 2: Echocardiogram at the admission Figura 3: PET / CT with myocardial areas of 18F–FDG fixation.

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