Case Presentation
A 66 year-old man presented with complaint of squeezing chest pain for two hours. Systematic questioning elicited no further significant symptom except dyspnea. The blood pressure was 130/80 mmHg and Heart rate was 50 bpm. Examination of the other systems was normal. Family history for coronary artery disease was negative, but he had history of smoking (one pack/day, for 20 years). Electrocardiography showed sinus rhythm with an acute infero-posterior myocardial infraction. The patient was taken to the cardiology intensive care unit. Aspirin (300 mg/day), standard heparin (10000 U bolus and 1000 U/hour infusion), nitroglycerin (10 mg/minute) and streptokinase infusion (1.500.000 IU) were started. During follow-up, transvenous pace-maker was inserted because complete atriovertricular block occurred after admission to the cardiology intesive care unit. Then, chest pain and ST segment elevation persisted, and hypotension and oliguria ensued. Third heart sound and rales involving more than one third of the lung fields were evident. Bedside echocardiography revealed inferior and posterobasal akinesia, anterolateral and apical hypokinesia with an ejection fraction as 20%. In spite of inotropic agents, the patients condition gradually worsened and thereupon, the patients was transferred to catheterization laboratory for rescue percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. The left coronary system was visualised in the left and right oblique, right cranial and caudal, and antero-posterior cranial positions. The proximal left anterior descending artery was aneurysmatic and myocardial bridging was observed in the mid segment of the left anterior descending artery and the left circumflex artery (Cx) could not be visualized during the left coronary angiography (Figure
1a-
b-
c). Aortography showed no separate ostium for Cx. The right coronary system imaging revealed proximal aneurysmatic dilatation, 90-95% dissected lesion in the mid portion of the right coronary artery (RCA) and Cx artery arising as a terminal extension of the right coronary artery (Figure
2a-
b). TIMI-1 flow was present in right coronary system. The right coronary artery lesion was considered unsuitable for percutaneus transluminal coronary angioplasty and thus, the patient was transferred to the cardiology intensive care unit. Immediately, the patient was consulted with the cardiovascular surgical team. However, surgical intervention was postponed for 12 hours because the patients had received thrombolytic therapy. Inraaortic balloon counterpulsation was planned but the patients condition deteriorated rapidly and cardiac arrest occurred which did not respond to resuscitation.
Figure 1a: Systolic compression at the mid-portion of LAD from the left lateral view.
Figure 1b: Normalization of systolic compression at the mid-portion of LAD.
Figure 1c: The absence of left circumflex artery in aortic root imaging from the right anterior oblique view.
Figure 2a: Proximal aneurysmatic dilatation and 90-95% dissected lesion in mid RCA from the left anterior oblique view.
Figure 2b: The left circumflex coronary artery arising as a terminal extension of the right coronary artery from the right anterior oblique view.