It is vital to recognize correctly, chest pain of cardiac etiology. Most commonly, it is because of blood supply-demand inequity in the myocardium. However, the phenomenon of myocardial bridging as a cause of cardiac chest pain has come to attention reasonably recently. Herein, a coronary artery with a normal epicardial orientation develops a transient myocardial course. If the cardiac muscle burden is substantial, the respective artery gets compressed during each cycle of systole, thereby impeding blood flow in the artery. Hence, myocardial bridging has been attributed to as a rare cause of angina. In this case report, the authors discuss a patient in whom myocardial bridging turned out to be an elusive cause of angina. We wish to underscore the importance of being clinically mindful of myocardial bridging when assessing a patient with angina.
CITATION STYLE
Ambesh, P., Sharma, D., Kapoor, A., Hess, A.-T., Shetty, V., Hollander, G., … Obiagwu, C. (2018). Unusual Sign from an Unusual Cause: Wellens’ Syndrome due to Myocardial Bridging. Case Reports in Cardiology, 2018, 1–3. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/3105653
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