| Literature DB >> 30792579 |
Ryan Cotter1,2, Mori Krantz1,2, Shea Hogan1,2, Matthew Holland1,2.
Abstract
Coronary artery aneurysms (CAA) are a rare cause of acute coronary syndrome and there is little consensus as to the optimal treatment. Based on case series as well as expert opinion, surgery has been suggested as the optimal treatment for a giant CAA. Here, we present the case of a patient with recurrent myocardial infarction and severe angina due to a giant CAA, who was deemed a poor surgical candidate due to his multiple medical comorbidities. Given his intractable anginal symptoms despite medical therapy, he chose to pursue percutaneous intervention. However, the aneurysm was larger than available covered coronary stents and the patient had significant atherosclerotic disease proximal and distal to the aneurysm itself. Our approach used a long drug-eluting stent as a scaffold to overlap covered coronary stents to successfully exclude the aneurysm. The patient's angina resolved and had no complications or readmissions after nearly 1 year of follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: acute coronary syndrome; angina; coronary atherosclerosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 30792579 PMCID: PMC6376528 DOI: 10.1177/1179547619828689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med Insights Case Rep ISSN: 1179-5476
Figure 1.(A) There is significant tortuosity of the right coronary artery (RCA) as well as a large aneurysm which partially fills with contrast (arrow). A large calcified rim can also be seen. (B) Positioning the drug-eluting stent. The distal marker can be seen just proximal to a large branch (arrow). (C) High-pressure postdilation of the covered stents to ensure apposition to the DES scaffold (3.5 mm non-compliant balloon at 18 atm). (D) Final angiography. The CAA has been successfully excluded with no residual flow into the aneurysm sac. CAA indicates coronary artery aneurysms; DES, drug-eluting stent.
Figure 2.The previously placed covered stents were widely patent on this 10-month follow-up angiogram performed due to increased dyspnea.