Diagnostic dilemma: A woman got ‘broken heart syndrome’ after eating too much wasabi

by time news usa

The Patient: A 60-year-old⁣ woman in Be’er Sheva, Israel

The‌ Symptoms: While enjoying the food at a wedding, the woman began feeling a painful​ pressure​ in ⁤her ‍chest that‍ then radiated ⁢into her arms. This sensation persisted for several hours, even‍ though ⁤the pain​ subsided enough that she opted to ‌stay at‍ the reception.The next day, lingering chest pain, discomfort, and generalized feelings of ‌weakness prompted her to ‍seek‍ medical ⁣care.

What Happened Next: Emergency room physicians performed an ultrasound and ‍detected⁤ abnormal activity in the ⁤patient’s⁢ left ventricle, the part‌ of the heart that performs most of⁢ the organ’s pumping action. ​Some segments of the ‍heart muscle were not contracting at all, and contraction in other segments was​ reduced.⁢ This disruption was ⁢”moderate‌ to severe,” doctors wrote ⁢ in ​a report of the case.

The Diagnosis: Doctors‍ resolute that ⁣the woman was‍ experiencing ‌a condition called takotsubo cardiomyopathy,also known as “broken heart syndrome,” which produces symptoms mimicking those of a heart attack,such as chest pain and‌ difficulty breathing.”Takotsubo” refers to a type of ‍Japanese jar ‌used for trapping octopuses; the condition ​distorts the muscles ⁢of the left ⁤ventricle, making it resemble a narrow-necked ​octopus-catching‍ jar.

The Treatment: ‍ The‍ woman received steroids ⁤and medications for lowering blood pressure,⁣ including ​ACE inhibitors, which relax arteries and ‌veins, and beta-blockers, which‍ block the ‌effects of stress hormones on the heart. The doctors referred her to a cardiac‌ rehabilitation center. After one month, an echocardiogram⁢ showed that the patient’s heart activity had returned to normal.

What makes the Case Unique: prior to this case, scientific studies had linked takotsubo cardiomyopathy to drug use, neurological disease, physical or emotional ‌stress, and allergic reactions to⁢ certain foods.‌ But this case had a cause that had never been documented before: Minutes before developing symptoms, ⁣the woman had mistaken wasabi for ​avocado⁢ and swallowed⁤ a⁤ teaspoon-sized helping.

This is the first example of wasabi​ consumption causing broken heart syndrome. While some compounds in⁢ wasabi are likely beneficial ‌to health, such⁤ as cancer-fighting agents, swallowing an unusually large amount may have ⁢triggered an extreme stress​ reaction in the patient, thus leading to‍ disruption of her normal heart function.

You may also like

Leave a Comment