“…The symptoms of such a dislocated lead are not specific and include, for example, fever, cyanosis, and decreased exercise capacity, or may not be present at all [15,16,24]. Sometimes, dislodgement, which occurs through the creation of turbulent blood flow, leads to increased thrombotic status and can result in thrombi around the lead, which may occasionally cause a pulmonary embolism [26,27]. As a routine CXR usually allows doctors to confirm dislocation with a very high probability [14,15,17,24,25,28,29], multimodal imaging is remarkably beneficial in the diagnostic pathway [30].…”