Clinical case: adult with Ebstein anomaly

Authors

  • Jennifer Paola Pacheco Rodriguez Hospital de Especialidades José Carrasco Arteaga. Cirugía. Hemodinámica. Bulán-Ecuador https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9917-7943
  • Irene Lucia Torres Washima Jose Carrasco Arteaga Hospital
  • Wladimir Augusto Serrano Barbecho Cuenca University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18537/RFCM.38.02.05

Keywords:

Ebstein anomaly, atrial flutter, congenital heart disease

Abstract

Introduction: Ebstein's anomaly is characterized by low implantation of the septal and posterior tricuspid leaflets; therefore, the right atrium is wide and its ventricle is small. Being a rather rare pathology in our environment, it is underdiagnosed and does not receive the appropriate treatment. Therefore, it is important to know it to avoid a delay in its clinical surgical management.

Clinical case: The patient is 46-year-old male, with a history of congenital hearing loss, who presented dyspnea (functional class III) plus palpitations and atypical chest pain approximately 1 year ago. In the physical examination, he revealed a holosystolic murmur in the tricuspid focus and moderate use of accessory muscles. A transesophageal echocardiogram revealed atrial arrhythmia plus implantation of the tricuspid leaflets and it was started a clinical treatment plus flutter ablation. In the evolution he presented improvement of the symptoms and depending on the deterioration of the functional class, surgical treatment.

Conclusions: in this case, clinical treatment and flutter ablation were adjusted according to the patient's symptoms, showing improvement.

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Published

2020-09-01