Spontaneous Resolution Of Residual Shunting In 2 Compromised Patients After Amplatzer Occlusion Of Postinfarction Ventricular Septal Defects
Yanagiuchi, T., Tada, N., Suchi, T., Mizutani, Y., Matsumoto, T., Sakurai, M., & Ootomo, T. (2019). Spontaneous Resolution of Residual Shunting in 2 Compromised Patients after Amplatzer Occlusion of Postinfarction Ventricular Septal Defects. Texas Heart Institute journal, 46(1), 44–47. https://doi.org/10.14503/THIJ-17-6416
View Original Source →Abstract
Ventricular septal defect (VSD) is a rare, potentially fatal complication of acute myocardial infarction. When surgical closure is contraindicated, transcatheter closure may be an alternative. Residual shunting after transcatheter closure of postinfarction VSDs has been reported; however, we found few cases of this in patients who also had severe heart failure or hemolysis. We report 2 closures of postinfarction VSDs with use of the Amplatzer Septal Occluder. Both elderly patients-one with severe heart failure, one with persistent hemolysis, and neither a surgical candidate-had high-velocity residual shunting through the occluders. We intensively managed the patients' conditions and used angiography and transthoracic echocardiography to record the gradual disappearance of each shunt over 4 months-the first such serial monitoring of which we are aware. We think that even substantial shunting in the presence of severe heart failure or hemolysis can eventually resolve spontaneously, assuming effective management of the concomitant medical conditions.
Case Details
Disease Location
Heart (interventricular septa)
Personal Characteristics
79-year-old man
Clinical Characteristics
2-month history of dyspnea and anorexia.ecg showed abnormal q waves and negative t waves in leads v1 through v3. Echocardiograms showed an akinetic aneurysm of the left ventricular apex. Suspected subacute anteroseptal mi, time of onset unknown. Coronary angiograms revealed an occluded mid-left anterior descending coronary artery with no collateral vessels. On day 21 after admission tte showed an apical muscular vsd. Ventricular septal rupture was suspected. Transcatheter vsd repair was performed. Tee showed a defect at the apex with a diameter of 11 mm on both the left and right ventricular sides; the rim was thin but looked stable from all angles. A 22-mm aso was deployed to cover the defect. Angiography and tee showed a well-placed device with a small leak at its inferior margin. Therapy with aspirin (100 mg/d) and clopidogrel (75 mg/d) was begun. On pod 3, tte revealed rapid left-to-right flow across the ventricular septum through the lower half of the aso. Hemolysis was discovered and developed into hemoglobin nephropathy, necessitating more than 30 units of transfused blood
Remission Characteristics
Serial tte over one month revealed gradually diminishing flow across the ventricular septum, and the blood indicators of hemolysis returned to normal. Two months after vsd closure, the biochemistry and hematology test results were normal despite a small residual shunt. At 4 months, color-flow doppler tte showed no shunting.
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Healing response to the occludes over time.
Clinical Treatment
Aspirin (100 mg/d) and clopidogrel (75 mg/d) transcatheter closure