# Sudden Death With Vasospastic Angina That Could Not Be Medically Managed

**Authors:** Murad Emar, Ali Bhatty

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.99544 · Cureus · 2025-12-18

## TL;DR

A man with vasospastic angina experienced severe complications despite treatment, leading to sudden cardiac death.

## Contribution

This case highlights a rare, severe form of vasospastic angina refractory to standard therapies and resulting in sudden death.

## Key findings

- The patient's vasospastic angina was unresponsive to escalating vasodilator therapies.
- He suffered a fatal ventricular arrhythmia despite medical management and rhythm surveillance.
- The case underscores the risk of sudden cardiac death in medically refractory vasospastic angina.

## Abstract

Vasospastic angina is characterized by transient coronary artery spasm leading to myocardial ischemia and may present with ST-segment elevation, arrhythmias, syncope, or cardiac arrest. Although typically responsive to vasodilator therapy, a minority of patients develop medically refractory disease with life-threatening complications. We report the case of a man in his 50s who experienced recurrent episodes of chest pain and syncope over several months, each associated with transient anterior ST-segment elevation and occasional dynamic troponin elevation. Coronary angiography and cardiac MRI demonstrated normal coronary anatomy and no structural heart disease. During admission, telemetry captured a prolonged ventricular pause (~10 seconds) secondary to diltiazem. Despite treatment with calcium-channel blockers, long-acting nitrates, and placement of an implantable loop recorder for rhythm surveillance, he continued to experience intermittent vasospastic episodes. Beta-blocker therapy was withdrawn due to concern for heart block, nitrate therapy was progressively uptitrated in the outpatient setting, and a dihydropyridine calcium-channel blocker was introduced. Several days after his final presentation, with chest pain and normal ECG and biomarkers, he suffered an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation and died in the intensive care unit. This case illustrates a rare but severe form of vasospastic angina that remained constrained and refractory to escalating medical therapy and ultimately resulted in a fatal ventricular arrhythmia. Early recognition, optimization of vasodilator therapy, and careful rhythm surveillance are essential, but even with appropriate management, some patients remain at risk for sudden cardiac death.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** diltiazem (PubChem CID 39186)
- **Diseases:** myocardial ischemia (MONDO:0024644), ventricular fibrillation (MONDO:0000190)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** heart block (MESH:D006327), myocardial ischemia (MESH:D017202), arrhythmias (MESH:D001145), heart disease (MESH:D006331), sudden cardiac death (MESH:D016757), chest pain (MESH:D002637), ventricular pause (MESH:D054138), cardiac arrest (MESH:D006323), Vasospastic Angina (MESH:D000787), ventricular fibrillation (MESH:D014693), syncope (MESH:D013575), Sudden Death (MESH:D003645), coronary artery spasm (MESH:D003329)
- **Chemicals:** dihydropyridine (MESH:C038806), nitrate (MESH:D009566), diltiazem (MESH:D004110)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12811979/full.md

## References

14 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12811979/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12811979