To the Editor The interesting report by Redfors, et aL[1] in the June issue of the Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, about an 88-year-old woman who presented with chest pain, found on echocardiography (ECHO) to have...To the Editor The interesting report by Redfors, et aL[1] in the June issue of the Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, about an 88-year-old woman who presented with chest pain, found on echocardiography (ECHO) to have transient left ventricular apical akinesis with a hypercontractile base, and an occluded first diagonal coronary branch with suspected acute plaque rupture, on coronary angiography, treated with a percutaneous coronary intervention, for which the authors concluded that the observed extent of akinesis was disproportionally large for the occluded coronary lesion, letting them to deduce that the acute myocardial infarction (AMI) caused the episode of Takotsubo syndrome (TTS), reminds me of a similar case of an AMI due to stent thrombosis and a resultant associated TTS.展开更多
文摘To the Editor The interesting report by Redfors, et aL[1] in the June issue of the Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, about an 88-year-old woman who presented with chest pain, found on echocardiography (ECHO) to have transient left ventricular apical akinesis with a hypercontractile base, and an occluded first diagonal coronary branch with suspected acute plaque rupture, on coronary angiography, treated with a percutaneous coronary intervention, for which the authors concluded that the observed extent of akinesis was disproportionally large for the occluded coronary lesion, letting them to deduce that the acute myocardial infarction (AMI) caused the episode of Takotsubo syndrome (TTS), reminds me of a similar case of an AMI due to stent thrombosis and a resultant associated TTS.