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Stress cardiomyopathy following acute ischemic stroke during flexible bronchoscopy: a rare sequence of complications

Cardiomiopatia induzida por stress após acidente vascular cerebral isquêmico agudo durante broncoscopia flexível: uma rara sequência de complicações

Sonja Badovinac, Marta Korsic, Branka Cucevic, Valentina Slivnjak, Andrea Vukic Dugac, Marko Jakopovic

To the Editor:

Flexible bronchoscopy is a routine procedure used in a wide spectrum of airway pathologies, with a rare incidence of severe complications. We would like to present a case of a rare and odd sequence of complications in a patient treated in our clinic. A 74-year-old woman who had metastatic angiosarcoma in the thoracic wall, with known multiple pulmonary metastases, previously treated with chemotherapy, and without medical history of vascular diseases was admitted to our clinic due to hemoptysis and fever. At admission, the neurological status of the patient was unremarkable, and the patient showed no signs of chest pain. Baseline electrocardiogram (ECG) revealed no significant findings (Figure 1A). Laboratory tests revealed normocytic anemia (hemoglobin, 97 g/L; hematocrit, 0.295 g/L), leukocytosis (10.9 × 109 cells/L), and elevated C-reactive protein (219.4 mg/L). Signs of renal or hepatic impairment were not registered. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy was indicated, and a blood clot was found in the left lower lobe bronchus. After the aspiration of the clot, there were no signs of active bleeding. During the procedure, the patient became unresponsive, presented with mydriasis, and stopped breathing but showed no alterations in heart rhythm. The patient was intubated, being initially manually ventilated, and started breathing spontaneously but remained unconscious for the next six hours. At admission in the ICU, her arterial blood pressure was 95/70 mmHg, and her oxygen saturation was 93%. The patient received oxygen support, which was discontinued when oxygen saturation was above 96% and her arterial blood pressure was normal. Initially, the patient was treated with dextrose saline intravenous infusion, aspirin, systemic corticosteroids, and diazepam. Right bulbar deviation, tonic spasm of the right arm, and flaccid paralysis on the left side were found. There was a negative Babinski sign on the left.



Brain magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated ischemic brain lesions in the right frontal cortex without signs of hemorrhage or cerebral metastases. Subsequently, ECG showed deep negative T waves in anterolateral leads (Figure 1B) with mildly increased troponin levels (troponin T, 0.270 µg/L). Transthoracic echocardiography revealed characteristic findings: ejection fraction of 45%, hypokinesis of apical and mid segments, and hiperkinesis of basal segments of the left ventricle-apical ballooning syndrome (Figure 2). Follow-up laboratory tests showed no pathological findings indicating secondary hepatic or renal impairment. Supportive treatment with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, a beta-blocker, aspirin, and a diuretic resulted in a decrease in troponin levels within 24 h (0.130 µg/L) and clinical improvement. The patient stayed 4 days in the ICU followed by 27 days of hospital stay.



The patient suffered serious neurological damage with left-sided hemiplegia, but subsequent tests revealed normalization of cardiologic findings and normal ECG (Figure 1C). During hospitalization, no recurrence of hemoptysis was found. Neurological rehabilitation of the patient was conducted after discharge.

Flexible bronchoscopy is a diagnostic and interventional technique, widely used for various pulmonary pathologies. Introduced in the late 1960s, flexible bronchoscopy was recognized as one of the diagnostic and therapeutic cornerstones of pulmonary medicine. It is a safe procedure. In one recent retrospective study, the overall rate of serious complications was 0.5%.(1) The most common complications were related to local anesthesia (0.3-0.5%); hypoxemia (0.2-21.0%); arrhythmias (1-10%); bleeding following biopsy (0.12-7.50%); pneumothorax/pneumomediastinum (1-6%); and fever (0.9-2.5%). Death occurs in 0.1-0.2% of the cases.(2) One of the few serious complications that exceptionally might occur during the procedure is the development of ischemic cerebrovascular stroke secondary to disordered heart rhythm, hypoxemia, or air embolism.(1,2)

Stress cardiomyopathy, which is recognized as a unique form of transient cardiomyopathy and was first described in 1990,(3,4) is a reversible cardiac impairment that mimics an acute ischemic cardiac event without significant pathomorphological changes in the coronary arteries.(3) Stress cardiomyopathy has the following characteristics: new ST-segment abnormalities on ECG (elevation and/or T-wave inversion), modest elevation in myocardial lesion biomarkers (troponin I, troponin T, and creatine kinase MB), transient left ventricular dysfunction, echocardiographic signs of hypokinesia/akinesia, and ballooning of the apical part of the left ventricle with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction.(4,5)
Stress cardiomyopathy can occur after acute mental or physical stress, subarachnoid hemorrhage, ischemic stroke, major head trauma, acute medical illness, pheochromocytoma exacerbation, and as a result of exogenous catecholamine administration.(6-9)

The pathophysiological mechanisms for the development of these disorders are not fully understood, but there is evidence of elevated levels of catecholamines, which indicates a connection with previously experienced extreme stress.(10) All of the changes are reversible, supportive care is usually sufficient, and normalization of the left ventricle function can be expected within 1-3 months.(8)

Our patient experienced a rare sequence of complications during and after fiberoptic bronchoscopy. It is known that cerebrovascular and cardiovascular complications are more common in oncology patients, but this particular order of complications deserves attention. Since the patient presented with hemoptysis, it was extremely important that the correct diagnosis of transient cardiomyopathy was made because of the potential risk of recurrent bleeding in case the stress cardiomyopathy had been mistaken for acute coronary syndrome and anticoagulant therapy had been introduced. Therefore, familiarity with and awareness of potential complications, appropriate diagnostic tools, and management knowledge are paramount to successful treatment of such events. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of such a sequence of bronchoscopy-related complications in one patient.

Sonja Badovinac
Physician, Department of Respiratory Diseases, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, University of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia

Marta Korsic
Physician, Department of Respiratory Diseases, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, University of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia

Branka Cucevic
Head, Department of Pulmonary Oncology, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, University of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia

Valentina Slivnjak
Physician, Department of Cardiology, Hospital for Medical Rehabilitation Krapinske Toplice, Krapinske Toplice, Croatia

Andrea Vukic Dugac
Physician, Department of Respiratory Diseases, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, University of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia

Marko Jakopovic
Head, Department of Pulmonary Circulation, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, University of Zagreb School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia


References

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8. Bybee KA, Prasad A. Stress-related cardiomyopathy syndromes. Circulation. 2008;118(4):397-409. http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.106.677625 PMid:18645066

9. Yoshimura S, Toyoda K, Ohara T, Nagasawa H, Ohtani N, Kuwashiro T, et al. Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in acute ischemic stroke. Ann Neurol. 2008;64(5):547-54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ana.21459 PMid:18688801

10. Wittstein IS, Thiemann DR, Lima JA, Baughman KL, Schulman SP, Gerstenblith G, et al. Neurohumoral features of myocardial stunning due to sudden emotional stress. N Engl J Med. 2005;352(6):539-48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa043046 PMid:15703419

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