NPPB and coronary artery disorder: Its definitive features include echocardiographic findings of transient regional wall motion abnormalities of LV or RV myocardium such as LV-basal hypercontractility and apical ballooning, a sudden, significant, and otherwise unexplainable drop in ejection fraction in the absence of culprit coronary artery disease; ECG abnormalities, a sudden elevation in BNP and Troponin T, and ending with the full resolution of the dysfunction and full recovery [1].