2 research outputs found

    Unusual Heart Involvement of Wegener’s Granulomatosis and Literature Review

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    A female patient, 60 years of age, was presented to our hospital with chest pain and monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT). She was transferred to the Coronary Care Unit and amiodarone perfusion restored basal rhythm in atrial fibrillation. She has not sign of heart failure. A transtoracic echocardiogram (TTE) was performed and an one mitral mass was found at atrioventricular junction with displacement of the posterior mitral leaflet A transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) demonstrated a mass at atrioventricular junction level with severe mitral regurgitation. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) confirmed the mass and anterolateral papillary muscle was thickening and hypertrophied with hyperenhancement consistent with fibrosis. Moreover, T2-weighted imaging demonstrated hyperintense mass with respect to the surrounding myocardium in relation of inflammatory mass. She had saddle nose by destruction of the septum, bilateral hearing loss, sinusitis and scleritis and renal involvement as well. This patient was diagnosed of Wegener's Granulomatosis (WG) and she was treated with methylprednisolone during 3 days, continued with prednisolone and cyclophosphamide. An 8 days later echocardiogram did not find the mass. However, the patient developed symptomatology of heart failure and in the context of severe mitral regurgitation, mitral valve replacement was decided in multi-disciplinary Cardiology-Cardiothoracic meeting.
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