Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a hereditary cardiac disease, diverse in clinical manifestations, cardiac structure and natural progression. Patients with disease are associate with a broad range of clinical presentations, from patients who are asymptomatic, accidentally discovered during routine examination, to patients with chest pain, dyspnea, syncope, and even sudden death. We are presenting the clinical case of a young male patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with rather large left ventricular wall thickness about 37mm who was hospitalized with severe dyspnea accompanied by tachycardia episodes and hypotension. The patient underwent electrical cardioversion, Doppler echocardiography, stress Doppler echocardiography with treadmill, cardiac MRI, basic blood tests, coronary CT angiography and ventriculography. The results showed the patient had a very high NT-proBNP level of 16,271 pg/mL; echocardiography showed asymmetric left ventricular hypertrophy, a maximum resting LVOT gradient of 28 mmHg, increasing to 64mmHg at peak stress, preserved left ventricular systolic function and grade III left ventricular diastolic dysfunction; greatly increased left ventricular mass of 199.6 g/m2, and delayed contrast enhancement involving the subendocardium of both ventricles and transecting the left ventricular free wall on cardiac MRI. We also discuss various treatment option for this young man.