July 2018 Br J Cardiol 2018;25:118–20 doi:10.5837/bjc.2018.022
Cristina Aguilera Agudo, Silvia Vilches Soria, Jorge Enrique Toquero Ramos
Case report A 72-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for asthenia and general malaise for a week. He had a history of alcoholism, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidaemia and peripheral artery disease with stent implantation in both iliac arteries. Five days before, he was admitted to the emergency department for asthenia and was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation and secondary congestive heart failure. Therapy with enoxaparin and warfarin was initiated, added to his long-term treatment with aspirin, but his symptoms worsened. On arrival, an ECG was performed showing sinus tachycardia with a narrow QRS complex (figure 1). Echocardiography
July 2002 Br J Cardiol 2002;9:406-10
Badri Chandrasekaran, Arvinder S Kurbaan
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