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Human Health Campus
Human Health Campus
Human Health Campus

Typical chest pain with intermittent LBBB

Teaching Case

Case presentation:

  • Female.
  • 65 y.o.
  • No coronary risk factors.
  • Typical chest pain.
  • Normal rest ECG.
  • Exercise test: intermittent left bundle branch block (LBBB).
  • Exercise MPI (99mTc-MIBI): Frequency-dependent LBBB.

Teaching points:

  • Approximately 1/3 of patients with heart failure (HF) present with conduction disturbances, most commonly (in about 25% of HF patients) as a LBBB pattern.
  • This percentage is significantly higher than the estimated (1.5%) prevalence of LBBB in the general population.
  • LBBB can be permanent or, more rarely, related to heart rate - that is, appearing above a frequency threshold.
  • Many patients with intermittent LBBB develop a permanent conduction disturbance in the long term. Repolarization changes are common in patients with LBBB, thus interfering with interpretation of stress tests.
  • Non-invasive imaging is indicated to depict ischemia in symptomatic patients with non-diagnostic ECG.
  • LBBB is commonly associated with perfusion defects at the anteroseptal and apical walls.
  • Frequency-dependet LBBB can cause “reversible” defects mimicking an ischemic pattern.

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