The No-Win Resuscitation: Ventricular Septal Rupture and Associated Acute Aortic Occlusion.
Jan-Thorben SiewekeJens Vogel-ClaussenAndreas MartensJörn TongersAndreas SchäferJohann BauersachsLars Christian NappPublished in: Case reports in critical care (2018)
A 66-year-old patient was admitted under continuous resuscitation for pulseless electrical activity. After return of spontaneous circulation ECG showed signs of acute inferior ST-elevation myocardial infarction, and echocardiography showed acute right ventricular failure with a dilated right ventricle. Carotid pulses were present in the absence of femoral pulses. Subsequent computed tomography demonstrated inferior myocardial infarction with ventricular septal rupture and thrombotic occlusion of the thoracic aorta, resulting in a heart-brain-circulation with loss of perfusion downstream of the aortic arch. Teaching Points. The present case prototypically demonstrates the fatal consequence of acute ventricular septal rupture and the eminent value of computed tomography and palpation of carotid in addition to femoral pulses in resuscitated patients. It is, to the best of our knowledge, the first description of an acute aortic occlusion in a patient with acute ventricular septal rupture.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- aortic dissection
- left ventricular
- computed tomography
- respiratory failure
- heart failure
- drug induced
- cardiac arrest
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- st elevation myocardial infarction
- end stage renal disease
- pulmonary artery
- aortic valve
- positron emission tomography
- case report
- pulmonary hypertension
- magnetic resonance imaging
- chronic kidney disease
- spinal cord
- heart rate
- prognostic factors
- heart rate variability
- acute coronary syndrome
- pet ct
- congenital heart disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- resting state
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- dual energy
- septic shock