A 27-year-old male with newly diagnosed generalized acetylcholine-receptor-antibody-positive myasthenia gravis with underlying thymoma without prior cardiac history was admitted to the ICU for acute type-2 respiratory failure secondary to myasthenic crisis. He was recently treated with a complete course of IVIG. Rapid taper of oral prednisone, and concurrent infection possibly resulted in the current crisis.
The patient had a screening Echocardiogram and was found to have reduced cardiac ejection-fraction of 40%. His anti-striational antibodies were negative. He did not have co-existing polymyositis and his CK was normal. Cardiac MRI however, (performed after Plasma Exchange) revealed pericarditis.
He was extubated and discharged on Prednisone 60 mg/day. Repeat Echocardiogram (after Plasma Exchange) showed return of myocardial function to normal (EF 68%). He underwent successful video-assisted-thoracoscopic-thymectomy and is currently on a slow taper of steroids.