A 38 years-old man was referred to our hospital for further cardiac examination of
atrial tachycardia and poor left ventricular (LV) function. ECG showed atrial fibrillation
(AF) tachycardia (130 beats/min), transthoracic echocardiography revealed LV dilation,
diffuse hypokinesis (LVEF 35%) and no significant valvular heart disease. He had diagnosed
as a tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy, because he had no significant coronary stenosis
and structural heart disease. After administration, he recovered sinus rhythm by DC
shock and maintained with amiodarone administration. In addition, sleep study reveled
mild sleep apnea syndrome. Therefore, adaptive servo-ventilation therapy had also
performed. Optimal medical therapy (OMT), including angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors and β blockers, and non-pharmacological treatments were started. Three
months after first administration, LVEF and BNP were dramatically improved, from 35
to 49%, and from 752 to 16 pg/ml, respectively. However, He had sometimes palpitations
and Holter ECG showed paroxysmal AF recurrence with short duration. Therefore, pulmonary
vein (PV) isolation by radiofrequency catheter ablation was performed. Four years
after PV isolation, he had never administration for heart failure worsening and AF
recurrence. In conclusion, total management is very important for heart failure patients.
In especially, OMT and catheter ablation are useful and safety treatment for patients
with tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy.
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