(Circulation. 1998;98:2094.)
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Images in Cardiovascular Medicine |
From the Interventional Cardiology Unit, San Carlos University Hospital, Madrid, Spain.
Correspondence to Fernando Alfonso, MD, PhD, Interventional Cardiology Unit, San Carlos University Hospital, Martin Lagos, S/N, 28040 Madrid, Spain.
A 69-year-old patient with unstable angina
presented to cardiac catheterization with a
tight lesion in the mid right coronary artery (Figure 1A
) and moderate lesions in the left main
and left anterior descending coronary arteries. During
coronary angioplasty, a stent was electively implanted in the
right coronary artery, with good initial results. However,
during subsequent aggressive, high-pressure dilations performed to
"optimize" stent expansion (using both angiographic and
intravascular ultrasound criteria), a vessel rupture was noticed. The
angiographic image revealed a faint but progressive smoke-like
extravasation of contrast within the stented segment (Figure 1B
, curved
arrow). Protamine administration, prolonged balloon inflations, and
further proximal stent implantation (partially overlapping the previous
stent) were unsuccessful in closing the site of blood leakage
into the pericardial space (Figure 1C
). Intravascular ultrasound
visualized, from "within the artery," the stent wall apposed to the
vessel wall and the site of vessel rupture encompassed by 2 struts of
the stent (Figure 2A
, arrow). Hand
injection of saline opacified the vessel lumen and also accurately
located the site of contrast exit outside the vessel (Figure 2B
).
Eventually, cardiac tamponade ensued, and a pericardial tap was
necessary to regain hemodynamic stability. At surgery,
a red clot was demonstrated overlying the mid right coronary
artery. When this thrombus was aspirated, a 2x2-mm hole in the vessel
wall permitted partial visualization of 1 metallic filament of the
stent. Coronary artery bypass grafting of the right and left
coronary arteries was performed successfully, and the patient
had an uneventful postoperative course.
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Footnotes
The editor of Images in Cardiovascular Medicine is Hugh A. McAllister, Jr, MD, Chief, Department of Pathology, St Luke's Episcopal Hospital and Texas Heart Institute, and Clinical Professor of Pathology, University of Texas Medical School and Baylor College of Medicine.
Circulation encourages readers to submit cardiovascular images to Dr Hugh A. McAllister, Jr, St Luke's Episcopal Hospital and Texas Heart Institute, 6720 Bertner Ave, MC1267, Houston, TX 77030.
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