A single-centre report on the characteristics of Tako-tsubo syndrome.
BACKGROUND: Tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy is an increasingly recognised phenomenon characterised by chest pain, ECG abnormalities, cardiac biomarker elevation and transient left ventricular dysfunction without significant coronary artery obstruction. AIMS: To report the clinical and echocardiographic characteristics from a large single-centre Australian series of patients with Tako-tsubo syndrome. METHODS: We prospectively collected data on 23 consecutive patients presenting between November 2005 and November 2007. Baseline demographics, ECG, echocardiography and coronary angiography were performed on nearly all patients. RESULTS: All patients presented with chest pain; 87% were female. Various stressors were noted and cardiac Troponin-T was elevated in 91% of patients. All patients had non-obstructive coronary disease at angiography. 19/23 patients had initial and subsequent echocardiography. Mean ejection fraction was 50% at baseline and 64% at follow-up (p<0.0001). Right ventricular dysfunction was present in eight, dynamic left ventricular outflow tract obstruction in two, diastolic dysfunction in seven and two patients had the mid-cavity variant. CONCLUSIONS: This large prospective single-centre Australian series of Tako-tsubo syndrome is in concert with previous published series. Complete recovery of left ventricular function on echocardiographic follow-up was typical. Although its pathogenesis remains unclear, early distinction from acute coronary syndromes is important and the prognosis is reassuringly good.[1]References
- A single-centre report on the characteristics of Tako-tsubo syndrome. Teh, A.W., New, G., Cooke, J. Heart. Lung. Circ (2010) [Pubmed]
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