Cardionerds: A Cardiology Podcast

110. Case Report: Feeling Dyspneic & Rejected – University of Maryland

11 snips
Mar 25, 2021
Dr. Rawan Amir, an internal medicine resident, details a challenging case of a post-heart transplant patient struggling with dyspnea due to cell-mediated rejection. Dr. Manu Mysore provides insights on T-cell mechanisms and the importance of timely diagnosis through endomyocardial biopsy. Dr. Anvishan Samanta discusses critical hemodynamic findings while Dr. Gautam Ramani elaborates on surveillance strategies for managing long-term transplant risks. The team emphasizes early recognition and collaboration in improving patient outcomes.
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INSIGHT

Keep A Broad Differential For Dyspnea

  • Dyspnea in transplant patients demands a broad differential including graft-specific and common causes.
  • Avoid anchoring; consider COPD, PE, infection, ACS, rejection, CAV concurrently.
ADVICE

Expedite Angio And Biopsy Together

  • In transplant patients with myocardial injury, expedite both coronary angiography and endomyocardial biopsy.
  • Rule out ischemia quickly but obtain tissue to confirm rejection before closing the differential.
INSIGHT

Global Dysfunction Suggests Non-Ischemic Injury

  • New global LV dysfunction with elevated troponin suggests non-ischemic injury when coronaries are normal.
  • In transplants, global hypokinesis often points toward rejection or myocarditis rather than focal ischemia.
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