Abstract
Cardiac sarcoidosis (CS) is challenging due to varied clinical presentation and limited accuracy of diagnostic criteria. We describe a case of suspected CS in a patient with ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) presenting in ventricular tachycardia (VT) storm. To describe the presentation of suspected CS in a patient with ICM and VT. N/A A 73 year old male with ICM and ejection fraction of 35% initially presented with myocardial infarct requiring 3-vessel coronary artery bypass surgery. Months later he developed sustained monomorphic VT which was detected on his pacemaker and underwent upgrade to a dual chamber implantable cardioverter defibrillator. He continued to have frequent VT ultimately presenting in VT storm. He was loaded on amiodarone and referred for radiofrequency catheter ablation. During index ablation, the left ventricular (LV) endocardial bipolar voltage was normal, which was inconsistent with the inferobasal and basal septal scar identified on pre procedural cardiac computed topography (CT) (Figure 1). The clinical VT was mapped to the anterior interventricular vein and targeted from the LV summit since proximity of AIV to the left anterior descending artery precluded ablation from the AIV. His arrhythmic presentation and LV dysfunction was disproportionate to degree of coronary disease. In addition, discordance between clinical VT origin site, bipolar endocardial voltage, and scar on cardiac CT prompted suspicion of an alternate underlying diagnosis, such as an arrhythmogenic inflammatory cardiomyopathy. A positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) later obtained showed evidence of patchy 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose uptake along the inferolateral LV, suggestive of CS. He was started on immunosuppressants but developed recurrent VT despite anti arrhythmic therapy and required 2 subsequent ablations. He has since remained quiescent from a VT standpoint on amiodarone with plans for alcohol septal ablation or stereotactic body radiation therapy if VT recurs. Symptoms have improved with steroids and immunosuppressants with no inflammation detected on most recent PET/CT High suspicion of CS should remain in patients presenting with significant arrhythmic burden. Normal endocardial voltage during VT ablation can be suggestive of an acute inflammatory process and should prompt consideration of CS, especially in cases with discordant areas of scar and wall thinning on imaging.
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