Abstract The purpose of this paper is to report a case diagnosed by bedside echocardiography in which bone cement infiltrated into the paravertebral vein system after percutaneous vertebroplasty (PVP) and caused intracardiac cement embolism (ICE). A 79-year-old female patient had suddenly become unconscious 14 hours after PVP. Emergency bedside echocardiogram showed that the patient had a strong echo in the right heart with a small amount of pericardial effusion, suspected of causing cardiogenic shock. Computed tomography (CT) showed high density in the distal branches of both pulmonary arteries and a high density in the right heart.Combined with the history of surgery, the clinician considers the foreign body as bone cement and the diagnosis was ICE. The bone cement in the heart was removed under emergency cardiopulmonary bypass. The patient recovered and was discharged smoothly.