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Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for High Takeoff Left Main Coronary Artery: A Case Report
Seetharam Vankudoth, DM Student Department of Cardiology, Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences Hyderabad 500082, Telangana India sitaramdm14@gmail.com
This article was originally published by Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Private Ltd. and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.
Abstract
Abstract
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for high takeoff left main is challenging, as it poses difficulties with the engagement of the guiding catheter and establishment of backup support. This report examines the case of a 53-year-old woman with history of anterior wall myocardial infarction with a ventricular septal defect (VSD), who was treated with left anterior descending (LAD) angioplasty and VSD device closure done 4 years back, and now she presented with unstable angina. After successful engagement of 5F Tiger diagnostic catheter through a right radial artery, the angiography revealed an 80% stenosis of the proximal LAD and in-stent restenosis 70% of mid-LAD. The authors tried to engage the left coronary system through the right femoral artery with 6F Judkins left, 6F Amplatzer left, 6F EBU, and 6F XBU. They could not cannulate because of high takeoff left main, so they switched to right radial access. Then they engaged a 6F 3.5 EBU catheter. Due to the weak backup support of the guiding catheter, they used another wire to stabilize it and the stent was implanted successfully. This is one of the rare case reports of PCI for high takeoff left main.
Keywords
high takeoff
left main
percutaneous coronary intervention
post–myocardial infarction ventricular septal defect
Introduction
Commonly, the coronary arteries arise from the aortic sinuses rather than from the tubular aorta. Often, however, the coronary arteries are located above the tubular junction, usually by only a few millimeters.1 Very high takeoff of the coronary artery, well above the sinotubular junction, occurs in less than 1% of the population,2 and data concerning this rare finding are confined to scattered case reports. Due to the difficulty in correctly engaging the guiding catheter and in gaining backup support, the performance of PCI for a high takeoff left main is challenging. We report a case of unstable angina of high takeoff the left main in which the patient underwent a successful PCI.
Case Report
A 53-year-old woman presented to our outpatient department with a complaint of chest pain and dyspnea for 1 week. She had a history of anterior wall myocardial infarction (MI) with a post-MI ventricular septal defect (VSD). She underwent left anterior descending (LAD) angioplasty and VSD device closure. Her physical examination was remarkable. On electrocardiography, there was ST-depression in anterior leads. On echocardiography, there was hypokinesia in LAD territory, moderate left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, and VSD device in situ with no residual shunt. The patient was admitted and scheduled for coronary angiography. Several attempts to cannulate the coronary arteries were unsuccessful (Fig. 1). We tried to engage the left coronary system through the right femoral artery with 6F Judkins left, 6F Amplatzer, 6F EBU, and 6F XBU. We could not engage because of high takeoff left main, so we switched to right radial access. Then we could engage a 6F 3.5 EBU catheter (Fig. 2). Due to the weak backup support of the guiding catheter, we used another wire to stabilize it, and the stent was implanted successfully.
This is one of the rare case reports of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for high takeoff left main. The patient improved symptomatically, was hemodynamically stable, and was discharged after 4 days.
Discussion
The overall incidence of anomalous origin of the left main coronary artery (LMCA) above the coronary sinus has ranged from 0.019 to 0.04% in catheterized populations.3 4 In many cases, this seems to be a normal variant. In 44% of the cases examined by Vlodaver and colleagues,5 one or both of the coronary ostia rose above the sinotubular junction: most frequently the LMCA (30%), followed by the right coronary artery (8%) and by both vessels (6%). A “high takeoff” is variably defined in the literature. Some authors classify any coronary artery with its origin above the sinotubular junction as anomalous. However, this definition appears to be inappropriately broad, because it includes many anatomically normal variants. Other authors restrict the definition of high takeoff to ostia that are more than 1 or 2 cm above the sinotubular junction. The highest reported origin of a coronary artery has been 5 cm above the sinotubular junction, in a case involving a right coronary artery.6
Although reports of PCI for high takeoff left main are scarce, in our case, the performance of PCI for high takeoff left main was challenging due to the difficulty in correctly engaging the guiding catheter and in gaining backup support. We were unable to engage an Amplatz-Left 0.75 guiding catheter. Although an Ikari-Left (Terumo) catheter would have been a better option to consider, as it is sometimes suitable for PCIs for right coronary lesions, including in cases of high takeoff ostium,7 we eventually performed the PCI with a 6F EBU from right radial access. However, because of the non-coaxial guiding catheter, the backup support for delivery of the stent was insufficient. We inserted a run through wire in the left circumflex artery (LCX) for enhanced support. In this type of difficult case, a change in access route is an option for engagement of the catheter.8
Previously, coronary angiography was the gold standard for the diagnosis of coronary artery anomalies. However, recent reports found that correct identification of these anomalies is feasible in only 53% of cases compared with computed tomographic (CT) angiography study.9 According to the modified classification of Greenberg et al,10 coronary artery anomalies are classified into three main groups: anomalous origin, anomalous course, and anomalous termination. Anomalous origin group includes high takeoff arteries, multiple ostia, origin from the pulmonary artery, and origin from opposite sinus with the abnormal course. In our case, the LMCA and right coronary artery originated from the left aortic side, and above sinotubular junction correlate with high takeoff definition.
High takeoff coronary arteries can present challenges during catheter cannulation. During coronary bypass surgery, if the anomaly has not been recognized, there have been cases of inadvertent transection and coronary cross-clamping during open-heart procedures.11 CT coronary angiography enables a precise display of the relationship between the coronary ostia and aortic sinuses and more easily defines anomalous origins of vessels than does conventional invasive angiography.12 When a high takeoff coronary artery ostia is identified, CT coronary angiography appears to be ideally suited to determine the ostium and course of the vessel further, thereby enabling the discovery (or exclusion) of abnormalities that might produce ischemia.
Conflict of Interest
None declared.
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