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  • Abstract In his second week of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) illness, a patient developed an unusually complicated course of acute coronary syndrome. One day after initial stabilization of a non-ST-elevated anterior myocardial infarction (MI), he sustained an ST-elevated anterior MI. Eight hours after emergency coronary intervention to the culprit lesion, he developed another ST-elevated MI in the inferior territory. Acute inflammation and cytokine storm in the immunopathological phase of SARS may play a role in coronary plague instability. Physicians should be alert to this potentially fatal complication and adopt appropriate vigilant and aggressive management strategies.
Subject
  • Severe acute respiratory syndrome
  • Viral respiratory tract infections
  • Ischemic heart diseases
  • Acute pain
  • Aging-associated diseases
  • Bird diseases
  • Causes of death
  • Immune system disorders
  • Medical emergencies
  • RTT
  • RTTEM
  • Syndromes affecting the respiratory system
  • Zoonotic bacterial diseases
  • Atypical pneumonias
  • Bat virome
  • Sarbecovirus
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