In acute embolic renal artery occlusion, thrombolytic therapy does not restore renal function and is therefore not indicated once the ischemic tolerance of the kidney (approximately 90 minutes) has been exceeded.
A myocardial infarction is a rare complication of a pheochromocytoma. A pheochromo-cytoma crisis may occur spontaneously, during pregnancy, or may be induced by a local trauma of the tumor or by drugs. We present a case report of a 41-year-old woman without anamnestic episodes of hypertension or angina pectoris. During angiography of the mesenteric arteries for further diagnostics of a sonographically suspected liver tumor, she developed an acute pulmonary edema and a cardiogenic shock with the electro- and echocardiographic findings of a large anterolateral-apical-diaphragmal myocardial infarction. The immediate coronary angiography 90 min after the onset of the myocardial infarction showed normal coronary arteries with normal coronary blood flow of the arteries supplying myocardial areas with akinetic segments and those arteries supplying hyperkinetic segments. The blood catecholamine levels at this time were excessively elevated. The left ventricular function improved to almost normal within the next 4 weeks with the beginning of the improvement already before the abdominal tumor was surgically removed at day five. The histology documented a pheochromocytoma with acute necrosis. The early invasive findings support the hypothesis that a reversible spasm of several epicardial arteries and not a direct toxic effect of catecholamines could have been the cause of the small myocardial infarction and the observed large myocardial stunning.
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