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SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis

Background: Coronary artery vasospasm-induced myocardial infarction is a rare cardiac complication of untreated thyrotoxicosis. Diagnosis is difficult due to the transient and unpredictable occurrence of coronary spasm [1]. Clinical Case: A 47-year-old Hispanic female smoker presented with a one-wee...

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Autores principales: Ataallah, Basma, Buttar, Barjinder, Kulina, Georgia, Kaell, Alan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208327/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.861
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author Ataallah, Basma
Buttar, Barjinder
Kulina, Georgia
Kaell, Alan
author_facet Ataallah, Basma
Buttar, Barjinder
Kulina, Georgia
Kaell, Alan
author_sort Ataallah, Basma
collection PubMed
description Background: Coronary artery vasospasm-induced myocardial infarction is a rare cardiac complication of untreated thyrotoxicosis. Diagnosis is difficult due to the transient and unpredictable occurrence of coronary spasm [1]. Clinical Case: A 47-year-old Hispanic female smoker presented with a one-week history of severe, intermittent substernal chest pain radiating to the left arm. The pain was associated with palpitations and shortness of breath. She was afebrile with a heart rate of 100, a blood pressure of 119/59, a fine tremor, and brisk reflexes. No lid lag or proptosis was appreciated. The thyroid was enlarged, non-tender, without palpable nodules. ECG showed T- Wave Inversions in leads V1-V2 and ST depressions in V4-V5. Chest pain was relieved by SL nitroglycerin. Lab results showed a peak Troponin of 0.20 (N < 0.06), TSH 0.01 mU/L (N > 0.45mU/L), free T4 5.54 (N < 1.46 ng/dl), total T3 4.50 pg/mL (N < 1.37 ng/mL), free T3 21.0 ng/mL (N < 4.4 pg/ml), TSI 3.61 IU/L (N < 0.55 IU/L), thyrotropin R Ab 7.47 IU/L (N < 1.75 IU/L) and thyroglobulin Ab 1.3 IU/ml (ULN < 0.9 IU/ml). Thyroid US showed a heterogeneous enlarged thyroid gland with increased vascularity. For her NSTEMI she was treated with a heparin drip, aspirin, clopidogrel, atorvastatin, propranolol, and isosorbide mononitrate. Methimazole was started to treat thyrotoxicosis. Cardiac catheterization revealed coronary vasospasm without evidence of valvular or coronary artery disease. Methimazole restored euthyroidism and she has not had recurrence of angina. Discussion: Rarely, hyperthyroidism can present with transient myocardial ischemia secondary to coronary artery vasospasm in patients with normal coronary arteries. The etiopathogenesis is unclear and may relate to a direct metabolic effect of excess thyroid hormone on the myocardium. In a Korean study evaluating chest pain in patients who underwent coronary angiography, the incidence of coronary vasospasm was 5%, occurring most frequently in women under 50 years of age with thyrotoxicosis [2]. Conclusion: Patients who present with angina and are thyrotoxic should be evaluated for vasospasm. Females under 50 years old with Graves’ disease are at highest risk. Treatment includes antithyroid medications along with nitroglycerin, and we can consider calcium channel blockers including diltiazem. Treatment of thyrotoxicosis eliminates recurrence of vasospasm [3]. References 1. Chudleigh RA, Davies JS: Grave’s thyrotoxicosis and coronary artery spasm. Postgrad Med J. 2007, 83(985):e1-e2. 2. Zheng W, Zhang YJ, Li SY, et al: Painless thyroiditis-induced acute myocardial infarction with normal coronary arteries. Am J Emerg Med. 2015, 33:5-10. 3. Marah N, Bryant K, Haq S, Khan M: Graves’ disease-induced coronary vasospasm. JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions. 2016, 9(23):2452-2453.
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spelling pubmed-72083272020-05-13 SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis Ataallah, Basma Buttar, Barjinder Kulina, Georgia Kaell, Alan J Endocr Soc Thyroid Background: Coronary artery vasospasm-induced myocardial infarction is a rare cardiac complication of untreated thyrotoxicosis. Diagnosis is difficult due to the transient and unpredictable occurrence of coronary spasm [1]. Clinical Case: A 47-year-old Hispanic female smoker presented with a one-week history of severe, intermittent substernal chest pain radiating to the left arm. The pain was associated with palpitations and shortness of breath. She was afebrile with a heart rate of 100, a blood pressure of 119/59, a fine tremor, and brisk reflexes. No lid lag or proptosis was appreciated. The thyroid was enlarged, non-tender, without palpable nodules. ECG showed T- Wave Inversions in leads V1-V2 and ST depressions in V4-V5. Chest pain was relieved by SL nitroglycerin. Lab results showed a peak Troponin of 0.20 (N < 0.06), TSH 0.01 mU/L (N > 0.45mU/L), free T4 5.54 (N < 1.46 ng/dl), total T3 4.50 pg/mL (N < 1.37 ng/mL), free T3 21.0 ng/mL (N < 4.4 pg/ml), TSI 3.61 IU/L (N < 0.55 IU/L), thyrotropin R Ab 7.47 IU/L (N < 1.75 IU/L) and thyroglobulin Ab 1.3 IU/ml (ULN < 0.9 IU/ml). Thyroid US showed a heterogeneous enlarged thyroid gland with increased vascularity. For her NSTEMI she was treated with a heparin drip, aspirin, clopidogrel, atorvastatin, propranolol, and isosorbide mononitrate. Methimazole was started to treat thyrotoxicosis. Cardiac catheterization revealed coronary vasospasm without evidence of valvular or coronary artery disease. Methimazole restored euthyroidism and she has not had recurrence of angina. Discussion: Rarely, hyperthyroidism can present with transient myocardial ischemia secondary to coronary artery vasospasm in patients with normal coronary arteries. The etiopathogenesis is unclear and may relate to a direct metabolic effect of excess thyroid hormone on the myocardium. In a Korean study evaluating chest pain in patients who underwent coronary angiography, the incidence of coronary vasospasm was 5%, occurring most frequently in women under 50 years of age with thyrotoxicosis [2]. Conclusion: Patients who present with angina and are thyrotoxic should be evaluated for vasospasm. Females under 50 years old with Graves’ disease are at highest risk. Treatment includes antithyroid medications along with nitroglycerin, and we can consider calcium channel blockers including diltiazem. Treatment of thyrotoxicosis eliminates recurrence of vasospasm [3]. References 1. Chudleigh RA, Davies JS: Grave’s thyrotoxicosis and coronary artery spasm. Postgrad Med J. 2007, 83(985):e1-e2. 2. Zheng W, Zhang YJ, Li SY, et al: Painless thyroiditis-induced acute myocardial infarction with normal coronary arteries. Am J Emerg Med. 2015, 33:5-10. 3. Marah N, Bryant K, Haq S, Khan M: Graves’ disease-induced coronary vasospasm. JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions. 2016, 9(23):2452-2453. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7208327/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.861 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Thyroid
Ataallah, Basma
Buttar, Barjinder
Kulina, Georgia
Kaell, Alan
SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis
title SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis
title_full SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis
title_fullStr SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis
title_full_unstemmed SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis
title_short SAT-462 Coronary Vasospasm-Induced Myocardial Infarction: An Uncommon Presentation of Thyrotoxicosis
title_sort sat-462 coronary vasospasm-induced myocardial infarction: an uncommon presentation of thyrotoxicosis
topic Thyroid
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208327/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.861
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