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Archivos de cardiología de México

On-line version ISSN 1665-1731Print version ISSN 1405-9940

Arch. Cardiol. Méx. vol.88 n.4 Ciudad de México Oct./Dec. 2018  Epub Aug 21, 2020

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acmx.2018.02.002 

IMAGES IN CARDIOLOGY

Pulsus alternans: An ominous sign

Pulsus alternans: un signo ominoso

Roberto Muniz Ferreiraa  b   

Paolo Blanco Villelaa  b 

a Saad Heart Institute, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

b Cardiology Department, Samaritano Hospital, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil


A 46-year-old man with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy was admitted to the intensive care unit because of acute decompensated heart failure. He complained of dyspnea at rest and peripheral edema, which was aggravated over the last week. His physical examination showed an elevated venous pressure, bilaterally reduced lung sounds at the pulmonary bases and symmetrical lower extremity edema. Despite the volume overload, his peripheral perfusion and blood pressure were normal, defining his hemodynamic profile as wet and warm. Continuous EKG monitoring confirmed the presence of normal sinus rhythm and his plethysmographic waveform obtained from the pulse oximeter revealed alternating wave amplitudes, suggesting pulsus alternans (Fig. 1, arrows). He was treated with intravenous diuretics and responded well to therapy over a few days.

Pulsus alternans is a sign of severe left ventricular failure, and is represented by alternating high and low systolic stroke volumes at every other cardiac cycle, which in turn affects the arterial pulse amplitudes in the same pattern.1 At the bedside setting, it can be detected by palpation, assessment of oximetry or arterial waveforms or even by sphymomanometry.2 Although it was first described in the nineteenth century by Traube, the exact pathophysiology remains obscure.1,3 Possible explanations include variations in intracellular calcium or diastolic volume, which could affect subsequent stroke volumes by Frank-Starling’s mechanism.2

Figure 1: Normal sinus rhythm associated with an alternating oximetry plethysmographic waveform, suggesting pulsus alternans (arrows) in a patient with decompensated heart failure. 

References

1. McLaughlin DP. Pulsus Alternans. N Engl J Med. 1999;341:955. [ Links ]

2. Weber M. Pulsus alternans: a case study. Crit Care Nurse. 2013;23:51-4. [ Links ]

3. Cohn KE, Sandler H, Hancock EW. Mechanisms of pulsus alternans. Circulation. 1967;36:372-80. [ Links ]

Recibido: 15 de Enero de 2018; Aprobado: 10 de Febrero de 2018

Corresponding author at: Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Edson Saad Heart Institute, Rua Rodolpho Paulo Rocco 255, Ilha do Fundão, Rio de Janeiro, RJ 21941-913, Brazil. E-mail address: betomf@terra.com.br (R. Muniz Ferreira).

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