Immediately after the coronary angiography, the patient complained of sudden- onset chest pain. His systolic arterial blood pressure instantly dropped to 60 mmHg, and the ECG showed sinus rhythm, a heart rate of 95 bpm, and a 3 mm ST-segment elevation in leads V1-V6. The coronary angiography was repeated and showed complete occlusion of the proximal LAD at the site of the previously documented stenosis. The patient was given intravenous (i.v.) unfractionated heparin, i.v. glyceryl trinitrate, and fluids, and his arterial pressure progressively rose to 90 mmHg. Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with direct stent implantation of the LAD was immediately performed, resulting in TIMI grade 3 flow restoration. There was an immediate resolution of his chest pain and the elevation of ST-waves disappeared. Blood tests after the procedure were normal, including troponin I at six and 12 hours. The patient was discharged 72 hours later.
As previously stated, radio-opaque angiographic contrast media are widely used in coronary and peripheral angiography, balloon angioplasty, and stent implantation. Any effect of contrast media on platelet function may be important to the clinical outcome, but it may also confound studies of platelet function in the angioplasty. Different contrast media have been found to have different effects on in vitro platelet function.[2] Previous studies have suggested that the use of different contrast media is associated with different rates of thrombus formation during angioplasty, suggesting that different effects of contrast agents on platelet function and thrombosis demonstrated in vitro may have important clinical implications.[3]
During angiography, blood is transiently replaced by the contrast media, which also rapidly reaches the vascular smooth muscles and affects different elements of the blood and blood vessels.[4] The extracellular matrix is rich in tissue factor, which is thought to play a key role in atherosclerotic plaque disruption with superimposed thrombosis. Many in vitro studies have investigated the chemical and mechanical effects of stimuli, which are similar to those involved in coronary angiography, on different elements of the microcirculation, such as the endothelium, platelets, leukocytes, smooth muscles, and inflammatory mediators. Although the activation caused by the contrast media appears to be independent of thrombin, high levels of local intracoronary thrombin generation in response to vessel wall injury and clotbound thrombin could independently cause platelets to degranulate.[5] Hutcheson et al.[6] also found that radiographic contrast media exert direct pharmacological effects on the endothelium that depress production of nitric oxide in response to the mechanical stimulus of shear stress and the endothelium-dependent agonist acetylcholine.
Our case is especially important since it shows that a widely used contrast media which was previously considered to be safe, iopromide, can cause sudden platelet degranulation which would result in potentially fatal coronary artery occlusion. Therefore, invasive cardiologists should be aware of this rare but clinically very important complication.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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