Abstract
Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO) is sometimes accompanied by aortic stenosis (AS). Reliable estimation of the true severity of AS is often difficult because it cannot be discriminated from dual stenosis. A 75-year-old woman was referred to our hospital due to traumatic hemopneumothorax with exertional dyspnea. Echocardiography revealed AS and LVOTO by chance. A continuous Doppler echocardiography revealed a late-systolic peaking dagger-shaped profile with a 6.0 m/s of peak jet velocity across the LVOT and aortic valve, but it was difficult to discriminate between the coexisting peak flows. For an accurate evaluation of AS, we performed landiolol (short acting beta-blocker) and cibenzoline (Na+ channel-blocking agent) stress echocardiography with simultaneous recordings of both left ventricular and aortic pressure by catheter examination. Cibenzoline successfully eliminated the LVOTO, but landiolol did not. Cibenzoline stress echocardiography enabled us to evaluate the AS severity as less than moderate, resulting in proper decision-making. The findings in this case clearly showed that cibenzoline stress echocardiography has a potential utility for determining AS severity in a patient with coexistent dynamic LVOTO.
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