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Abstract P232: Dilated Cardiomyopathy With Electrocardiographic Changes And Coronary-Pulmonary Fistula: An Uncommon Presentation Of Primary Aldosteronism In The Covid-19 Era

Abstract only Primary aldosteronism is the most frequent forms of curable hypertension and elevated aldosterone levels have been associated with endothelial proliferation and pathological remodeling of the heart and arteries; however, coronary arterial abnormalities have never been reported in patie...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979) Tex. 1979), 2020-09, Vol.76 (Suppl_1)
Main Authors: Marzano, Luigi, Scanelli, Giovanni
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Abstract only Primary aldosteronism is the most frequent forms of curable hypertension and elevated aldosterone levels have been associated with endothelial proliferation and pathological remodeling of the heart and arteries; however, coronary arterial abnormalities have never been reported in patients with primary aldosteronism. We report the case of a 53-year-old Caucasian obese man (BMI 37 Kg/m 2 ) with recent history of hypertension, fatigue and subjective dyspnea who was admitted to our hospital after performing an outpatient echocardiography that showed hypertensive and ischemic heart disease in dilated phase (LVEDVI 95 mL/m 2 ; LVEF 43%). His laboratory results showed hypokalemia (3 mmol/L) and an elevated aldosterone-renin ratio [(294 ng/L)/(1μU/mL)]. After case confirmation with saline infusion test, the abdominal CT scan showed a subcentimeter adenoma in the right adrenal gland. Surprisingly we noticed that, after oral potassium correction, the electrocardiogram revealed a symmetrical T-wave inversion and subsequently a coronary angiography detected a coronary artery fistula between the left anterior descending artery and the pulmonary artery in the absence of significant stenosis. In the Italy's CoViD-19 pandemic full spread, we preferred to postpone the diagnosis of the lateralization of aldosterone hypersecretion by adrenal vein sampling and we started a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist with a clinical follow-up of cardiovascular symptoms for the optimal treatment of coronary artery fistula. After about two months of follow-up, the patient remains asymptomatic with good blood pressure control, normal potassium levels and significant echocardiographic improvement (LVEDVI 67 mL/m 2 ; LVEF 51%). Our case highlights a possible association between hypertensive patients with coronary artery fistulas and primary aldosteronism. We recommend cardiologists and clinicians to maintain a high level of suspicion of primary aldosteronism in these patients.
ISSN:0194-911X
1524-4563
DOI:10.1161/hyp.76.suppl_1.P232