From the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Lankenau Hospital and
Medical Research Center, Wynnewood, Pa, and Department of Medicine, Thomas
Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.
Correspondence to Peter R. Kowey, MD, Lankenau Medical Office Building East, 100 Lancaster Ave, Ste 556, Wynnewood, PA 19096.
A 70-year-old woman
with no past cardiac history was admitted for near collapse and chest
discomfort that occurred when she was informed that her husband of 45
years had died in our hospital of congestive heart failure and
refractory ventricular arrhythmias. The ECG
revealed minor anterior ST-segment elevations and inferolateral
ST-segment depressions, which resolved after intravenous
nitroglycerin was administered. Cardiac enzymes were
minimally but definitely elevated.
The patient underwent cardiac catheterization, which
revealed normal coronary arteries. The left ventriculogram
showed anterolateral akinesis and apical hypokinesis, as depicted in
the Figure
Footnotes
The editor of Images in Cardiovascular Medicine is Hugh A. McAllister, Jr, MD, Chief, Department of Pathology, St Luke's Episcopal Hospital and Texas Heart Institute, and Clinical Professor of Pathology, University of Texas Medical School and Baylor College of Medicine.
Circulation encourages readers to submit cardiovascular images to Dr Hugh A. McAllister, Jr, St Luke's Episcopal Hospital and Texas Heart Institute, 6720 Bertner Ave, MC1267, Houston, TX 77030.
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Images in Cardiovascular Medicine
A Broken Heart
. The patient was discharged on aspirin and
amlodipine. An echocardiogram repeated 3 months later was normal. She
has no memory of the entire hospitalization but continues to grieve for
her husband.

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Figure 1. Left ventriculogram during diastole (A) and
systole (B) showing anterolateral akinesis and apical hypokinesis.
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