His coronary angiography revealed 60% left main coronary artery stenosis, 90% proximal and 50% mid left anterior descending coronary artery stenosis. Left circumflex coronary artery was absent in left coronary system, instead he had two well developed high lateral (ramus intermediate) arteries one of which had 70% stenosis (Fig. 1a). He had a dominant right coronary artery with no coronary lesions. Interestingly circumflex artery was arising as a terminal extension of posterolateral branch of right coronary artery (Fig. 1b-d). The patient was urgently treated with coronary artery bypass grefting.
In patients with coronary artery disease, if left circumflex artery can not be visualized during coronary angiography, either an ostial total occlusion or congenital agenesis may be suspected. Arising anomalies of left circumflex artery are diagnosed when left circumflex artery is not visualized during left coronary injection in the absence of proximal occlusion and at the same time ostium of circumflex artery should be visualized seperately from right sinus valsalva or as an extension of right coronary artery.[4,5] Angiographic recognition of coronary artery anomalies prior to surgery is of great importance. The cardiac surgeon must be aware of the abnormal anatomy in order to avoid accidental ligation or transection at the time of surgery. We presented an extremely rare congenital coronary anomaly.
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2) Yamanaka O, Hobbs RE. Coronary artery anomalies in 126,595 patients undergoing coronary arteriography. Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn 1990;21:28-40.
3) Mievis E, Bopp P, Righetti A. Congenital absence of the circumflex artery. Association with an infarction without coronary disease. Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1979;72:1155-9. [Abstract]