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Total Occlusion of Left Main Coronary Artery by Dilated Main Pulmonary Artery in a Patient with Severe Pulmonary Hypertension

Overview
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2002 Feb 22
PMID 11855158
Citations 4
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Abstract

A 34-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital because of recently aggravated right heart failure without angina for 5 months. When she was 25 years old, patch repair with Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) was performed for the secondum type of atrial septal defect (ASD) with moderate pulmonary hypertension. The chest PA, echocardiography and cardiac catheterization at current admission revealed Eisenmenger syndrome without intracardiac shunt. Chest CT scan with contrast revealed markedly dilated pulmonary trunk, both pulmonary arteries and concave disfigurement of the left side of the ascending aorta suggesting extrinsic compression, as well as total occlusion of the ostium of the left main coronary artery that was retrogradly filled with collateral circulation from the right coronary artery. The coronary angiography showed normal right coronary artery and the collaterals that come out from the conus branch to the mid-left anterior descending artery (LAD) and that from distal right coronary artery to the left circumflex artery (LCX) and to the distal LAD, respectively. On aortography, the left main coronary artery was not visualized with no stump, suggestive of total occlusion of the ostium of the left main coronary artery. From our experience, it is possible to say that the occlusion of the ostium of the left main coronary can be induced by the dilated pulmonary artery trunk due to ASD with pulmonary hypertension and that, if the ASD closure was too late, the narrowing or obstruction of the left coronary artery could not be resolved even after operation owing to irreversible pulmonary hypertension.

Citing Articles

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PMID: 31608189 PMC: 6783219. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.5354.


Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for a Patient with Left Main Coronary Compression Syndrome.

Ikegami R, Ozaki K, Ozawa T, Hirono S, Ito M, Minamino T Intern Med. 2018; 57(10):1421-1424.

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Compression of adjacent anatomical structures by pulmonary artery dilation.

Dakkak W, Tonelli A Postgrad Med. 2016; 128(5):451-9.

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Left main bronchus compression due to main pulmonary artery dilatation in pulmonary hypertension: two case reports.

Jaijee S, Ariff B, Howard L, ORegan D, Gin-Sing W, Davies R Pulm Circ. 2015; 5(4):723-5.

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