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Rare presentation of sarcoidosis: Multimodal imaging diagnosis of cardiac involvement.

We report a case of sarcoidosis with an unusual presentation, initially manifesting as bilateral pulmonary embolism and then as a cardiac form of the disease with an ominous clinical event consisting of sustained ventricular tachycardia. The diagnosis was established by clinical and magnetic resonance criteria despite normal conventional echocardiographic study. Detailed functional assessment provided by tracking techniques (speckle tracking echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance tissue tracking) enabled the detection of regional deformation abnormalities, indicating prominent circumferential strain and epicardial layer alterations, partly matching the structural changes depicted by distribution of delayed enhancement. We find this case notable for various issues it raises concerning diagnosis and management of cardiac sarcoidosis. These are mainly related to recent developments in imaging modalities that enable non-invasive identification of structural and functional abnormalities in this condition early, before overt deterioration in left ventricular ejection fraction. Information from different imaging modalities and tools provide information that could potentially assist preclinical diagnosis, with possible prognostic implications.

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