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Description
A 70-year-old male patient with no previous history of cardiovascular complaints was referred to the emergency department due to progressively aggravating dyspnoea and diminishing functional capacity (starting 12 months before) and abnormal findings in a chest x-ray suggesting possible expansion of the thoracic aorta (figure 1). One month before admission, the patient started complaining about dizziness and dyspnoea induced by the upright position and relieved by recumbency – platypnoea. He denied orthopnoea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea or angina. He had retired 10 years before due to dorsalgia thought to be of musculoskeletal origin. A thoracic CT scan (figure 2) was performed and revealed a 10 cm sized thoracic aortic aneurysm (luminal size: 4.5 cm), starting below the exit of the left subclavian artery and reaching the inferior third of the thoracic aorta. It eroded four thoracic vertebrae (T5–T8) and caused significant collapse of the left atrium. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiograms (figure 3) were performed, unveiling a partially collapsed left atrium (antero-posterior diameter of 11 mm in long-axis left paraesternal view). The patient underwent surgery, with placement of an endovascular stent graft. Two years following the intervention, the patient is practically asymptomatic. Compression of lumbar vertebrae is occasionally caused by abdominal aortic aneurysms. However, back pain resulting from erosion of thoracic vertebrae by an aortic aneurysm is an extremely rare finding. Furthermore, platypnoea caused by compression of the left atrium by an aneurysmatic aorta is very uncommon.
Learning points
Thoracic aortic aneurysms may have extremely atypical presentations, such as platypnoea, presumably caused by left atrium compression in the upright position, and dorsalgia due to compression of thoracic vertebrae.
An aortic aneurysm may grow to substantial dimensions before causing signifi cant symptoms.
Chronic lumbago or dorsalgia should not be automatically attributed to musculoskeletal causes.
A chest or abdominal x-ray should be considered in patients with persistent lumbago or dorsalgia, especially in the presence of cardiovascular risk factors.
Footnotes
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.