Scrub typhus presenting as infective endocarditis of the mitral valve is rare. There are few reports of infective endocarditis by scrub typhus with just one previous report of involvement of the aortic valve. An 18-year-old woman presented with prolonged fever for 1 month.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThrombosuction plays a controversial role during primary percutaneous intervention (PCI). Landmark trials have demonstrated no additional role of thrombosuction during primary percutaneous intervention towards improving mortality and outcome during primary percutaneous intervention. We describe a rare elective coronary angioplasty where only aggressive thrombosuction (almost 150-200 mL) of blood from the coronary artery established the antegrade coronary flow and saved an octogenarian from impending sudden cardiac death (SCD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Family Med Prim Care
June 2022
We present an extremely rare case of a 26-year-old young male, an engineering student and a staunch vegetarian from early childhood without conventional cardiac risk factors, with hyperhomocysteinemia presenting as acute lateral wall ST elevation myocardial infarction with angiographic evidence of focal critical occlusion of the first diagonal branch. Although homocysteinemia and its association with coronary artery disease is well known, hyperhomocysteinemia with very high level of plasma homocysteine (>100 mmol/l) presenting as an exclusive small vessel coronary artery disease like involving only diagonal branch sparing major coronary vessels has not yet been described in the literature. Our case is unique and the first description of an exclusive small vessel coronary artery disease sparing major coronary vessels in the presence of paradoxically very high-level serum homocysteine (in a young male without conventional cardiac risk factors).
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