Affiliation:
1. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Hyogo Prefectural Harima-Himeji General Medical Center , 3-264 Kamiya-cho , Himeji 670-8560, Japan
2. Department of Exploratory and Advanced Search in Cardiology, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine , Kobe , Japan
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Percutaneous alcohol septal ablation (ASA) is a non-surgical treatment for symptomatic hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. It has a potential risk for systolic anterior motion (SAM)–related mitral regurgitation (MR) deterioration, leading to acute congestive heart failure. In such clinical scenarios, additional surgical interventions for SAM-MR are risky.
Case summary
A 70-year-old man experienced acutely deteriorated heart failure caused by SAM-related MR following ASA, for which venous-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and a percutaneous left ventricular assist device (Impella CP, Abiomed, MA, USA) were required. Transoesophageal echocardiography showed that an interventricular septal oedematous protrusion led to a large coaptation gap of mitral leaflets with a pseudo-prolapse of the posterior mitral leaflet (PML). Because of his prohibitive surgical risks, we opted for transcatheter edge-to-edge mitral valve repair with MitraClip therapy. After removing the Impella device, an XT clip (Abbott Vascular, CA, USA) was located to cover the pseudo-prolapsed PML, resulting in optimal MR reduction with an acceptable mean transmitral valve-pressure gradient. Thereafter, his heart failure was well controlled, and venous-arterial ECMO was successfully removed on post-MitraClip Day 2.
Discussion
This case demonstrated that MitraClip therapy rescued the patient from a rare complication of severe acute heart failure with haemodynamic collapse caused by massive SAM-related MR following ASA. MitraClip therapy can be a feasible, less-invasive interventional therapy for SAM-related MR in cases with acceptable severity of iatrogenic mitral stenosis post-MitraClip implantation.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine