A 63-year-old female presented to a freestanding emergency room with dizziness, palpitations, and hypotension, The patient was found to have an irregular wide complex tachycardia, consistent with ventricular tachycardia, hypomagnesemia and severe hypocalcemia. The tachycardia was refractory to treatment with IV amiodarone and magnesium, and only resolved with correction of the serum calcium. Review of the medical record revealed an echocardiogram 19 years earlier reporting left ventricular dysfunction. The patient was unaware of this diagnosis and was not taking medical therapy. Echocardiogram revealed no significant change in left ventricular function, and coronary angiography showed no significant coronary artery disease. The patient's nonischemic cardiomyopathy may have been a predisposing factor for the arrhythmia presentation. We explore a hospital admission involving the rare association of hypocalcemia and monomorphic ventricular tachycardia, which is not well documented in the literature.
Keyphrases
- left ventricular
- case report
- heart failure
- healthcare
- coronary artery disease
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- emergency department
- public health
- systematic review
- single cell
- catheter ablation
- aortic stenosis
- mitral valve
- adverse drug
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- high glucose
- early onset
- stem cells
- acute coronary syndrome
- cardiovascular events
- bone marrow
- drug induced
- aortic valve
- endothelial cells
- combination therapy
- ejection fraction
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- cell therapy