Left Ventricular Noncompaction: Cause or Consequence of Myocardial Disease? A Case Report and Literature Review

2019 
A 57-year-old woman presented to the Emergency Department with symptoms of worsening heart failure (HF). She had a past medical history of breast cancer treated with surgery and chemotherapy with anthracyclines and no family history of cardiomyopathy (CMP). In the last year, she received a diagnosis of HF with normal coronary arteries, during hospitalization for acute onset of dyspnea and was treated with medical therapy. After several months, few days before admission to our hospital, an echocardiography (ECHO) showed features of left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC), not described in previous ECHO and further confirmed by cardiac magnetic resonance. This case highlights the current uncertainties regarding the pathogenesis of LVNC and the clinical challenge of cardiologists facing LVNC morphology to decide if they are observing a genetic CMP, a phenotype overlapping with dilated or hypertrophic CMP, or a variant of the left ventricular (LV) wall anatomy. No consensus exists among scientific communities regarding diagnostic criteria of LVNC and in most cases; the key element in the diagnostic decision is not the LVNC by itself, but the associated LV dilation and/or dysfunction, hypertrophy, arrhythmias, and embolic events.
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