Clinical features, complications, and outcomes of exogenous and endogenous catecholamine-triggered Takotsubo syndrome: A systematic review and meta-analysis of 156 published cases

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Abstract

Innumerable physical stress factors including externally administered catecholamines, and pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) have been reported to trigger Takotsubo syndrome (TS). A systematic search of PubMed/MEDLINE identified 156 patients with catecholamine-induced TS up to December 2017. Data were compared within the catecholamine-induced TS cohort, but some comparisons were also done to a previously published large all-TS cohort (n = 1750). The mean age was 46.4 ± 16.4 years (72.3% women). The clinical presentation was dramatic with high complication rates in (68.2%, n = 103; multiple complications 34.6%, n = 54). The most common TS ballooning pattern was apical or mid-apical (45.2%, n = 69), followed by basal pattern (28.8%, n = 45), global pattern (16.0%, n = 25), mid-ventricular (8.3%, n = 13), focal (0.6%, n = 1), and unidentified pattern (1.9%, n = 3). There was an increase in the prevalence of apical sparing ballooning pattern compared to all-TS population (37.7% vs 18.3%, P < 50 years than patients >50 years (73/92, 79.3% vs 29/56, 51.8%, P = 0.0009). Recurrence occurred exclusively in patients with PPGL-induced TS (18/107 patients, 16.8%). PPGL-induced TS was characterized by more global ballooning's pattern (22/104, 21.2% vs 3/49, 6.1%, P = 0.02), and lower left ventricular ejection fraction (25.54 ± 11.3 vs 31.82 ± 9.93, P = 0.0072) compared to exogenous catecholamine-induced TS. In conclusion, catecholamine-induced TS was characterized by a dramatic clinical presentation with extensive left ventricular dysfunction, and high complication rate.

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Y-Hassan, S., & Falhammar, H. (2020, May 1). Clinical features, complications, and outcomes of exogenous and endogenous catecholamine-triggered Takotsubo syndrome: A systematic review and meta-analysis of 156 published cases. Clinical Cardiology. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.23352

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