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Tasneem Naqvi
Tasneem Naqvi

Public Documents 4
Atrial Flutter with Atrial Alternans in a Patient with Cardiac Amyloidosis
Tasneem Naqvi
Merve Kurt

Tasneem Naqvi Z

and 1 more

April 26, 2024
Mechanical cardiac alternans is usually associated with left ventricular dysfunction. Atrial alternans has been described on invasive assessment of atrial action potentials, however cannot be detected clinically. Herein we report a patient who had transthyretin type cardiac amyloidosis with prior history of recurrent atrial fibrillation requiring ablations as well as ablation for atrial flutter and a recent history of cardioversion for atrial flutter. The patient presented with diastolic heart failure and recurrent atrial flutter and was referred for a TEE guided cardioversion. Mechanical left and right atrial alternans was seen on Doppler interrogation of both atrial appendages with velocities corresponding to the flutter P wave on the ultrasound ECG monitor. The patient was successfully cardioverted with the TEE probe in situ. Post cardioversion TEE showed resumption of normal albeit reduced mechanical atrial function in the left atrium and preserved right atrial function in tissue Doppler imaging. Our case demonstrates the mechanical phenomenon of atrial alternans in both atria on TEE with disappearance of atrial alternans during sinus rhythm suggesting rate related atrial alternans likely related to atrial stiffness from amyloid infiltration and as well as possibly scar formation from prior ablations.
Impact of Physician Performed Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) During first Outpatien...
Tasneem Naqvi
Raed Aladham

Tasneem Naqvi

and 2 more

January 13, 2023
A document by Tasneem Naqvi. Click on the document to view its contents.
Post-cardioversion Atrial Stunning -- Not to be Forgotten
Tasneem Naqvi
Merve Kurt

Tasneem Naqvi

and 1 more

September 22, 2022
We present a case of a 60 year old male who found to be in atrial fibrillation during routine evaluation. Anticoagulation was initiated for 36 hours and he was referred for TEE guided electrical cardioversion. There was no thrombus identified in the left atrial appendage, however the appendage was large and had a tongue like accessory lobe along with spontanous contrast on the left atrium and its appendage. TEE probe was not withdrawn, patient underwent successful cardioversion with 200 joules and developed a thrombus in the left atrial appendage immediately after cardioversion, which rapidly became more dense. There was an associated marked decrease in appendage velocities. Patient was hospitalized to initiate low molecular weight heparin. This case highlights the need for vigilance in patients with unknown duration of atrial fibrillation, who have received a short duration of anticoagulant therapy and who have adverse appendage anatomy as thrombus may develop immediately after cardioversion despite anticoagulation.
Tricuspid valve regurgitation management with valve replacement Late Presentation of...
Hong Seok Lee
Tasneem Naqvi

Hong Seok Lee

and 1 more

February 23, 2021
A 51-year-old unrestrained female driver with history of a high-speed motor vehicle accident had been followed due to progressively worsening tricuspid valve regurgitation (TR). Three dimensional (3D0 transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) showed a TR jet through a perforation in the an avulsed anterior leaflet from the tricuspid valve and another central tricuspid TR jet regurgitation due to tricuspid leafletresulted from malcoaptation of the leaflets from tricuspid annulus annular dilatation.

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