Surgical indications and technique
The anomalous left main coronary artery with an interarterial
course is considered to be a high risk lesion, and
even without symptoms, its surgical correction is recommended.[2,3] Although a surgical correction is indicated
in symptomatic ARCA, the correction of asymptomatic
ARCA remains controversial, but it is still a widely
recommended operation.[3,4] In patients with symptoms,
the surgery should not be delayed. Given the fact that
sudden death is rare in children before adolescence, the
option to delay elective surgical repair until late puberty
or approximately 10 years of age in the asymptomatic
patients is also recommended.[2,5]
Many surgical strategies have been suggested to treat this defect, including coronary reimplantation, unroofing the intramural segment and coronary artery bypass grafting. Specific morphologic details, mainly the ostial status and the intramural course, influence the type of the surgical repair. The unroofing procedure, suitable for those with intramural course, was first described by Mustafa et al.[6] This technique creates a new coronary ostium in the correct sinus, eliminates the course between the PA and aorta, and eliminates the intramural course.
The operation is performed through a median sternotomy with standard aortic arterial and dual stage single venous cannulation. Following the aortic cross-clamping, the cardioplegia is given through the antegrade route. The aortotomy should be performed with great care to prevent any inadvertent injuries to the anomalous coronary artery. If the origin of the anomalous coronary artery is at a level higher or cephalad to the commissure, the unroofing of this segment can be performed with little injury risk to the aortic commissural attachments (Fig. 2a). The unroofing technique involves opening the slit-like ostium with fine scissors. The shared wall between the coronary artery and the aortic lumen is excised to the extent of its intramural course. Care should be given not to be too aggressive and cut beyond the shared wall to the outside of the aorta. Next, the edges of the wall are sutured with interrupted fine prolene suture.
If the intramural course is at or below the level of the commissural attachments of the aortic valve, the commissure may require detachment and reattachment to the aortic wall at the appropriate level to prevent a prolapse of the aortic leaflets and aortic insufficiency (Fig. 2b). An alternative procedure is the “fenestration/ limited unroofing” that avoids the manipulation of the commissural attachment (Fig. 2c). A probe or rightangle clamp can be passed from the anomalous origin to the point at which the intramural course leaves the aorta from the appropriate sinus. The neo-ostium is created in the correct coronary sinus by excising the shared wall and eliminating the interarterial course without disturbing the valve commissure.
With the unroofing technique, a new coronary ostium is created in the correct sinus and the course between the PA and aorta is eliminated. The intramural course is no longer present. The postoperative CT angiographic studies can confirm the new origin of the anomalous artery from the correct sinus of the Valsalva (Fig. 3 a, b).
1) Click RL, Holmes DR Jr, Vlietstra RE, Kosinski AS,
Kronmal RA. Anomalous coronary arteries: location, degree
of atherosclerosis and effect on survival-a report from
the Coronary Artery Surgery Study. J Am Coll Cardiol
1989;13:531-7.
2) Jaggers J, Lodge AJ. Surgical therapy for anomalous aortic
origin of the coronary arteries. Semin Thorac Cardiovasc
Surg Pediatr Card Surg Annu 2005:122-7.
3) Gulati R, Reddy VM, Culbertson C, Helton G, Suleman
S, Reinhartz O, et al. Surgical management of coronary
artery arising from the wrong coronary sinus, using standard
and novel approaches. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2007;
134:1171-8.
4) Patel S. Normal and anomalous anatomy of the coronary
arteries. Semin Roentgenol 2008;43:100-12.