Although respiratory system injury is the dominant feature of acute severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the occurrence of cardiovascular complications has generated considerable concern. During COVID-19, proinflammatory mediators trigger a state called “cytokine storm” that is especially seen in advanced stages and lead to a life-threatening acute systemic inflammatory syndrome characterized by multiple organ dysfunction. The intense inflammatory process may cause coronary vasospasm (CVS). Here, we present a 61-year-old patient with anterior ST-elevation myocardial infarction (Fig. 1a and 1b) because of severe, diffuse, spontaneous CVS (Fig. 2a and 2c, Video 1). It includes almost all the side branches in COVID-19 with the patient being diagnosed with COVID-19 pneumonia owing to typical findings on thoracic computed tomography (Fig. 1c) and highly suspicious clinical and laboratory results.
CVS was revealed to be completely normal without occlusive coronary artery disease after administration of nitroglycerin (Fig. 2b and 2d, Video 2). Notably, acute coronary syndrome was excluded, and the patient was transferred back to the emergency service. Despite intense medical therapy, severe hypoxemia was sustained and clinical findings got worse, and the patient died during emergency service follow-up.
The context of a hyper-inflammatory response during COVID-19 may be a cause of coronary spasm hould be considered in patients with COVID-19, especially in severe cases, and nitroglycerin therapy should be considered during clinical evaluation or angiogram lab in the intervention of patients with COVID-19.
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Footnotes
Informed consent: The informed consent was not obtained. The patient was in acute coronary syndrome and was taken to coronary angiography procedure as an emergency. The patient died shortly after the procedure (coronary angiography).
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