| Literature DB >> 19818151 |
Hannibal Baccouche1, Torsten Beck, Martin Maunz, Peter Fogarassy, Martin Beyer.
Abstract
Cardiac injury occasionally occurs as a result of blunt chest trauma. Most cardiac complications in chest trauma are due to myocardial contusion rather than direct damage to the coronary arteries. However, traumatic coronary injury has been reported, and a variety of underlying pathophysiological mechanisms have been proposed. We present a 26 year old patient presenting with an acute coronary syndrome as a consequence of a soccer-shot impact to the chest. CMR showed apical inferior infarction, as well as multiple small septal lesions which were presumed to have resulted from embolization. The culprit lesion was a proximal 75% LAD stenosis with a prominent plaque-rupture and thrombus-formation, and the distal LAD was occluded by thromboembolic material.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19818151 PMCID: PMC2770538 DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-11-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Figure 1Twelve lead ECG demonstrating a classical picture of inferiorly located STEMI with ST-segment elevation in the inferior leads (II, III, aVF) and ST-segment depression in lead I and aVL.
Figure 2Invasive coronary angiography demonstrates single vessel coronary artery disease in the LAD with a proximal 75% stenosis showing a prominent plaque-rupture with thrombus-formation and distal occlusion. The LAD is wrapping around the LV apex. The other coronaries (selective intubation) are without significant stenosis.
Figure 3Multiple CMR short and long axis views, demonstrating inferior apical akinesia in the SSFP cine sequences. Contrast images show transmural LGE in the inferior apical region as a consequence of distal LAD occlusion and numerous focal patches of intramural LGE due to multiple embolic infarctions via the septal branches.