Emergency department patient with aortic stenosis – case report

    Authors

    Keywords

    aortic stenosis, emergency department, diagnosis

    DOI

    https://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2016.635

    Full Text

    Nowadays when we think about aortic stenosis, aortic valve area and the gradient over the aortic valve are mainly considered as a precise way of defining the aortic stenosis severity, which is certainly justified, but what about the first-line procedures in diagnosing this pathology? Is it always recognized in a timely manner and who are the physicians who are faced with this highly responsible task? Working in an emergency department is very challenging and difficult and the physician who works there is often being put in a position to raise a suspicion or diagnose serious illnesses and conditions with often limited diagnostic procedures and in conditions that are far from ideal. Regardless of the extent of available diagnostic methods, the most important things that a physician who works under emergency room circumstances can arm himself/herself with, are his/her own knowledge, experience and the maximum dedication to the patient’s medical history and clinical status. Adequate heart auscultation is one of the challenges. Although one could say it is an easy task to hear known crescendo-decrescendo aortic stenosis ejection systolic murmur, in noisy and crowded circumstances of an emergency hospital admission, many times it is far from simple and can be missed. ( 1 , 2 ) In the paper we have shown a young male patient in whom this murmur was noticed for the first time exactly in an internal medicine emergency room, and that in combination with other typical symptoms that patient’s medical history presented, such as chest pain, progressive effort intolerance, dyspnea and palpitations, and ECG signs of left ventricle strain, gave a whole picture and was the first step toward diagnosing severe symptomatic aortic stenosis, after which the patient was examined by a cardiologist and presented to the cardiac surgeon for the final treatment. Hereby we wanted to point out that today’s modern diagnostic and treatment technology for serious conditions is of little use if the patient does not reach it at all and that a person, that is the physician still has a crucial role with his/her ability to notice, suspect, attend and possibly precisely diagnose numerous diseases and pathology including the aortic valve stenosis.

    Cardiologia Croatica
    Back to search

    Emergency department patient with aortic stenosis – case report

    Extended Abstract
    Issue12
    Published
    Pages635
    PDF via DOIhttps://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2016.635
    aortic stenosis
    emergency department
    diagnosis

    Authors

    Anđela Simić*ORCIDCroatia
    Dubravka Vrljić BorojevićORCIDCroatia

    Full Text

    Nowadays when we think about aortic stenosis, aortic valve area and the gradient over the aortic valve are mainly considered as a precise way of defining the aortic stenosis severity, which is certainly justified, but what about the first-line procedures in diagnosing this pathology? Is it always recognized in a timely manner and who are the physicians who are faced with this highly responsible task? Working in an emergency department is very challenging and difficult and the physician who works there is often being put in a position to raise a suspicion or diagnose serious illnesses and conditions with often limited diagnostic procedures and in conditions that are far from ideal. Regardless of the extent of available diagnostic methods, the most important things that a physician who works under emergency room circumstances can arm himself/herself with, are his/her own knowledge, experience and the maximum dedication to the patient’s medical history and clinical status. Adequate heart auscultation is one of the challenges. Although one could say it is an easy task to hear known crescendo-decrescendo aortic stenosis ejection systolic murmur, in noisy and crowded circumstances of an emergency hospital admission, many times it is far from simple and can be missed. ( 1 , 2 ) In the paper we have shown a young male patient in whom this murmur was noticed for the first time exactly in an internal medicine emergency room, and that in combination with other typical symptoms that patient’s medical history presented, such as chest pain, progressive effort intolerance, dyspnea and palpitations, and ECG signs of left ventricle strain, gave a whole picture and was the first step toward diagnosing severe symptomatic aortic stenosis, after which the patient was examined by a cardiologist and presented to the cardiac surgeon for the final treatment. Hereby we wanted to point out that today’s modern diagnostic and treatment technology for serious conditions is of little use if the patient does not reach it at all and that a person, that is the physician still has a crucial role with his/her ability to notice, suspect, attend and possibly precisely diagnose numerous diseases and pathology including the aortic valve stenosis.