Case 29 - When Push Comes to Shove...

Author: Dr Gokul Sagar Bailur Reviewer/Editor: Dr Julia Burkert-Milone/Dr Nick Mani

A fit and well, middle aged lady is seen in the Emergency Department complaining of 3 months of ongoing and worsening cough, breathlessness , fatigue with significant reduction of exercise tolerance. For the last 24hrs, she has exprienced left sided ongoing blurred vision.

On examination, vital signs are stable, airway to exposure intact, but there is reduce visual acuity and fields in the left eye. ECG — sinus tachycardia with global T-wave Inversion.

You decide to perform bedside focused echo as an extension of standard clinical assessment : -

Clip collection - Bedside Focused Echo (click right/left arrows to cycle between clips)

Clips 1: PLAX. Clip 2- PSAX. Clip 3-6: Apical 4 Chambers +/- zoom / Colour Flow Doppler. Clip 7: Subxhiphoid 4-Chamber. Clip 8: IVC

You decide to perform a more advanced bedside echo:

Clip collection - Bedside Focused Echo (click right/left arrows to cycle between clips)

Clip 1: Biplane EF. Clip 2: FS and EF. Clip 3: FAC.

Note- LV ejection fraction does not equate to the Cardiac Output. This depends on multiple factors such as loading/pressures, valvular regurgitation/ stenosis, heart rate/rhythm, amongst other factors.


Whilst in the Emergency Department, the patient suddenly develops left sided ptosis and dysarthria, transferred to resus. Urgent CT head was performed, which showed multiple cerebral ischaemic infarcts likely of cardio-embolic origin.

She was started on anticoagulation after detailed MDT discussion with Stroke, Cardiology and Critical Care Medicine

Case Resolution

Urgent BSE Level 2 echo was performed, which confirmed severe bi-ventricular failure (LV EF of 12%) and an apical thrombus.

Patient was eventually diagnosed to have MRI-positive-myocarditis-induced severe bi-ventricular failure, complicated by an LV thrombus leading to an embolic shower and multiple cerebral infarcts.

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Case 28 - Oh Balls...