Volume 59, Issue 5 pp. 627-632
Patient Report

Virus myocarditis in a 1-month-old boy presenting as two types of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia

Shuhei Fujita

Corresponding Author

Shuhei Fujita

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

Correspondence: Shuhei Fujita, MD PhD, Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, 2-2-78 Nishinagae-cho, Toyama-shi, Toyama 930-8550, Japan. Email: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Takeshi Futatani

Takeshi Futatani

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Tatsuya Kubo

Tatsuya Kubo

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Masae Itamochi

Masae Itamochi

Department of Virology, Toyama Institute of Health, Toyama, Japan

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Yusuke Yachi

Yusuke Yachi

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Hidenori Iwasaki

Hidenori Iwasaki

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Ayako Shimao

Ayako Shimao

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Shihomi Ina

Shihomi Ina

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Hiroyuki Higashiyama

Hiroyuki Higashiyama

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Noboru Igarashi

Noboru Igarashi

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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Kiyoshi Hatasaki

Kiyoshi Hatasaki

Department of Pediatrics, Toyama Prefectural Central Hospital, Toyama, Japan

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First published: 12 April 2017
Citations: 4

Abstract

Herein we describe the case of a 1-month-old boy with acute viral myocarditis, who presented with two kinds of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, and who was cured after medical treatment. He was brought to the emergency room with poor feeding due to fever. On the third day of hospitalization, a narrow QRS tachycardia (180–200 beats/min) was detected. Echocardiography showed a high echoic area at the atrial septum around the atrioventricular node. The patient was clinically diagnosed with acute myocarditis. The narrow QRS tachycardia was diagnosed as incessant junctional ectopic tachycardia. The patient was treated with propranolol and landiolol. The frequency of the tachycardia decreased, but a different narrow QRS tachycardia was detected on the 15th day of hospitalization on electrocardiogram (220 beats/min), which was ascribed to atrioventricular nodal re-entrant tachycardia. Atenolol was effective for the tachycardia. At 2 years follow up, cardiac function was normal and tachycardia had not recurred.

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