Spontaneous Healing Of Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection
Almafragi, A., Convens, C., & Heuvel, P. V. (2010). spontaneous healing of spontaneous coronary artery dissection. Cardiology journal, 17(1), 92–95. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcin.2019.03.018
View Original Source →Abstract
Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is a rare cause of acute coronary syndrome and sudden cardiac death. It should be suspected in every healthy young woman without cardiac risk factors, especially during the peripartum or postpartum periods. It is important to check for a history of drug abuse, collagen vascular disease or blunt trauma of the chest. Coronary angiography is essential for diagnosis and early management. We wonder whether thrombolysis might aggravate coronary dissection. All types of treatment (medical therapy, percutaneous intervention or surgery) improve the prognosis without affecting survival times if used appropriately according to the clinical stability and the angiographic features of the involved coronary arteries. Prompt recognition and targeted treatment improve outcomes. We report a case of SCAD in a young female free of traditional cardiovascular risk factors, who presented six hours after thrombolysis for ST elevation myocardial infarction. Coronary angiography showed a dissection of the left anterior descending and immediate branch. She had successful coronary artery bypass grafting, with complete healing of left anterior descending dissection.
Case Details
Disease Location
Chest, coronary arteries
Personal Characteristics
38 years old woman
Clinical Characteristics
Chest pain for more than 6 hours, killip class ii, hypotension tachycardia, st elevation in the anteroseptal leads, inverighted t waves in v1, v2. Cardial biochemical markers elevated. Dissection of the proximal left anterior descending and intermediate branch. Anterolateral, septal and apical akinesia of the left ventricle.
Remission Characteristics
One week after coronary artery bypass, lad was healed along with intermediate branch. Spams on other vessels dissapeared
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Bypass placement on the correct lumen, with retrogarde flow and intravascular pressure augmentation
Clinical Treatment
Treatment with thrombolysis for an anterolateral st elevation myocardial infarction. Intra-aortic-balloon-pump introduced. Surgery with an off-pump coronary artery by-pass grafting a left anterior mammary artery placed on to the lad and vebous graft to the intermediate branch.