# The role of cardiac imaging in assessing the cardiac involvement of type 1 Gaucher disease: a case report with review of literature

**Authors:** Ahmed Youssouf Addou, Wafa El Mire, Nawal Doghmi, Aatif Benyass

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s43044-024-00465-7 · The Egyptian Heart Journal · 2024-03-24

## TL;DR

This case report highlights the use of cardiac imaging to assess rare heart involvement in a patient with type 1 Gaucher disease.

## Contribution

The paper presents a rare case of cardiac involvement in type 1 Gaucher disease and emphasizes the role of non-invasive imaging in its diagnosis.

## Key findings

- Cardiac magnetic resonance revealed interstitial fibrosis likely due to myocardial infiltration in a type 1 GD patient.
- Echocardiography showed concentric left ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic dysfunction in the patient.
- The case underscores the importance of non-invasive imaging for diagnosing cardiac manifestations of GD.

## Abstract

Gaucher disease (GD) is a lysosomal storage disease that leads to the accumulation of glucocerebroside within reticuloendothelial cells, haematological, neurological, skeletal and abdominal organs. These clinical manifestations are common to all types of GD, but categorization depends on the absence of neurological involvement (type I) or its presence (type II and III). Cardiac involvement is rare and only reported in few cases, where valvular and aortic calcifications were associated with type IIIc. Other cardiac manifestations, such as constrictive pericarditis, pulmonary hypertension, myocardial infiltration, and restrictive cardiomyopathy, had also been reported.

We report a case of a 72-year-old patient with known type 1 GD who presented with a sudden syncope during exercise. He reported also an exercise intolerance evolving for three months. Echocardiography found concentric left ventricular hypertrophy with segmental hypokinesis, bi-atrial enlargement, and mildly reduced ejection fraction. Mitral flow was in favour of grade II diastolic dysfunction with elevated filling pressure. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) showed interstitial fibrosis in the basal infero-septal wall, probably due to the myocardial infiltration of GD. Due to the lack of echocardiographic and CMR hallmarks of cardiac GD, we conducted a literature review on similar findings.

This case illustrates the importance of non-invasive cardiac imaging in the diagnosis, prognosis and management of cardiac manifestations of GD.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Gaucher disease (MONDO:0018150), constrictive pericarditis (MONDO:0006711), pulmonary hypertension (MONDO:0005149), restrictive cardiomyopathy (MONDO:0005201)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neurological involvement (MESH:C538190), lysosomal storage disease (MESH:D016464), bi-atrial enlargement (MESH:D006332), pulmonary hypertension (MESH:D006976), diastolic dysfunction (MESH:D018487), valvular and aortic calcifications (MESH:D000082862), left ventricular hypertrophy (MESH:D017379), Cardiac involvement (MESH:D006331), fibrosis (MESH:D005355), syncope (MESH:D013575), myocardial infiltration (MESH:D017254), type IIIc (MESH:D009084), constrictive pericarditis (MESH:D010494), restrictive cardiomyopathy (MESH:D002313), GD (MESH:D005776), exercise intolerance (MESH:C564972)
- **Chemicals:** glucocerebroside (MESH:D005963)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10961294/full.md

## References

16 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10961294/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10961294