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A 36-year-old man born with pulmonary atresia intact ventricular septum, atrial septal defect and Ebstein anomaly with hypoplastic right heart (figure 1 and online supplementary video). Waterson shunt had been performed in childhood, but over a period of time it had occluded with pulmonary circulation being dependent on bronchopulmonary collaterals. He is on targeted therapy for pulmonary hypertension. He was symptomatic with intermittent focal atrial tachycardia, despite amiodarone therapy. Coumarin therapy was avoided due to risk of massive haemoptysis. At electrophysiology, he had an atrial flutter circuit, which was resolved by cavotricuspid isthmus ablation. Postablation, he developed pleuritic left-sided chest and shoulder tip pain treated as lower respiratory tract infection. He continued to have significant pain with symptoms of sepsis. CT scan demonstrated number of splenic infarcts and a large splenic liquefied haematoma. Aspiration of the splenic haematoma showed altered blood. Diagnosis was of splenic infarcts secondary to embolisation at time of ablation, associated with subsequent infarct liquefaction with a splenic size of 16 cm (figure 2).
Splenic infarcts are not a recognised complication of right-sided catheter ablation—systemic emboli may occur in left atrial ablation.1 In cases with systemic to pulmonary shunts or septal defect, the substrate for systemic emboli is clearly present.
Splenic haematomas have been shown to resolve over time. Splenectomy may be an option,2 but in his case would be potentially fatal due to his pulmonary arterial hypertension, although liquefied haematomas do regress over time. As a major part of the spleen has liquefied, prophylaxis against pneumococcal infection is recommended in this patient with cyanotic congenital heart disease.
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Data
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Files in this Data Supplement:
- Data supplement 1 - Online video
Footnotes
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Contributors This patient has been under our care. Being the senior registrar, I have been thoroughly involved in the care and preparing the case for publication with the help of DD-L and LJF who is the designated consultant for the patient.
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Competing interests None.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.