| Literature DB >> 31853209 |
Shone O Almeida1, Nasih M Ahmed2, Ronald P Karlsberg1,3.
Abstract
Left main coronary artery thrombus (LMCA-T) is a rare disease state and diagnosed with invasive coronary angiography (ICA). We present a case of LMCA-T diagnosed with coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) and treated without ICA in a patient who presented to a hospital in the middle of war zone in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan. Coronary CTA performed 1 month later demonstrated resolution of the thrombus. Fractional flow reserve computed from computed tomography (FFR-CT; HeartFlow, Redwood City, CA) performed retrospectively confirmed that the clot was not hemodynamically significant at the time of diagnosis. This case demonstrates the diagnostic capabilities of coronary CTA and FFR-CT when ICA is not readily available.Entities:
Keywords: Coronary CTA; FFR-CT; acute myocardial infarction; anticoagulation; cardiogenic shock; left main coronary artery thrombus; thrombus
Year: 2019 PMID: 31853209 PMCID: PMC6906343 DOI: 10.1177/1179546819894592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med Insights Cardiol ISSN: 1179-5468
Figure 1.Oblique view of the left main coronary artery with hypodense thrombus in the ostium.
Figure 2.Oblique view of the left main coronary artery with resolution of the thrombus 1 month later.
Figure 3.Cross sections of the left main coronary artery demonstrating a thrombus in the ostium. The image was obtained using curved multiplanar reformation. The blue dots represent the center line. Arrows point to the thrombus.
Figure 4.Cross sections of the left main coronary artery demonstrating resolution of the thrombus present 1 month previously. Arrows point to the location of the previous thrombus.
Figure 5.FFR-CT on presentation is shown on the left and that after treatment on the right. There was no change in vessel hemodynamics. FFR-CT indicates fractional flow reserve computed from computed tomography.