Journal of the National Medical Association, cilt.110, sa.4, ss.396-398, 2018 (SCI-Expanded)
Ventricular septal (VS) rupture after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is an uncommon complication in the reperfusion era. Bedside echocardiography (BECH) continues to be a strong diagnostic tool for emergency physicians treating dyspneic patients, especially for decision-making on the management strategies to use with these unstable patients. In the case we present here, a patient is diagnosed with a delayed mechanical complication after AMI, and a swift management plan is made with the aid of point-of-care BECH. The patient is a 72-year-old man with dyspnea who was admitted to the ED 5 days after receiving a primary percutaneous coronary intervention with stent implantation for AMI; in the ED, the patient was diagnosed, via BECH, with a VS rupture. On arrival, his vital signs and the results of his physical examination depicted shock and low perfusion with wet lung. A cardiac examination revealed a new 2/6 harsh holosystolic murmur along the left sternal border without pretibial oedema. Emergency physicians performed BECH, and subcostal views of the heart revealed a wide interventricular septal rupture and left-to-right shunting with minimal pericardial effusion. The patient underwent surgery immediately to repair the defect. The post-operative course was uneventful, and he was discharged in stable condition on the seventh day after the surgery. The use of BECH to recognize a VS rupture is critical because such a defect may be the most important determinant of mortality in AMI patients who are in shock. BECH thus can influence clinicians’ acute management and disposition decisions.