Stroke Risk and Atrial Mechanical Dysfunction in Cardiac Amyloidosis
Citations Over TimeTop 19% of 2020 papers
Abstract
Amyloidosis is associated with poor prognosis, and patients with cardiac involvement have especially poor outcomes. Cardiac amyloidosis leads to higher rates of atrial arrhythmia and an increased risk of intracardiac thrombus formation. However, atrial mechanical dysfunction due to protein deposition in amyloidosis may lead to thrombus formation in the absence of atrial arrhythmia. We present a 42-year-old male patient with familial transthyretin amyloidosis who suffered an embolic stroke that originated from a left atrial appendage thrombus in the absence of any documented atrial fibrillation. This case highlights atrial mechanical dysfunction in patients with cardiac amyloidosis and the need to better stratify thrombotic risk in this population with integration of echocardiographic parameters and transesophageal echocardiography.
Related Papers
- → Spinal multifocal amyloidosis derived from wild-type transthyretin(2011)25 cited
- → Transthyretin amyloidosis: a little history of hereditary amyloidosis(2017)7 cited
- → New Medications in the Treatment of Hereditary Transthyretin Amyloidosis(2018)4 cited
- → Systemic transtiretin amyloidosis in the elderly patient with recurrent pleural effusions(2021)1 cited
- → Structurally abnormal transthyretin causing familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy in Sweden(1987)28 cited