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ABSTRACT ID : IRIA 1169 A RARE CONGENITAL ANOMALY OF CORONARY ARTERY

Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients. They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

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Page 1: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

ABSTRACT ID : IRIA 1169

A RARE CONGENITAL ANOMALY OF CORONARY

ARTERY

Page 2: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

BACKGROUND

Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.

They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease.

Coronary artery anomalies are classified in several patterns.

-- with regard to the origin/course/termination/number/intrinsic anatomy

Many cases are clinically in significant ,only some cases are diagnosed when another surgical cardiac procedure is carried out.

But in some cases it can lead to life-threatening complications like myocardial infarction/ arrhythmia/ sudden cardiac death early in life.

Page 3: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Hypoplastic coronary artery disease (HCAD) was first reported in 1970.

It is underdevelopment of one or more major branches of the coronary arteries characterized by a narrowed lumen or shorter course.

Its incidence is 0.02% of the general population and 2.2% of all the congenital coronary artery anomalies.

Etiology still unknown. 

However, it was postulated to result from various conditions,

-- stenosis of the coronary artery orifice -- an aberrant course between the pulmonary artery and

aorta. -- a coronary artery ostium in ectopic position

--stenosis of the coronary ostium.

Page 4: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

The condition is mostly asymptomatic.

However, some presents with chest pain and palpitations

It bears a high risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) as a result of ventricular arrhythmia during effort, consistent with a sudden and total occlusion of the artery.

Mechanisms involved - coronary artery spasm reflecting abnormal vasodilator mechanisms and endothelial dysfunction leading to myocardial ischemia.

Page 5: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

VESSELS NORMAL DIAMETER (MM)

RIGHT CORONARY ATRERY 2.71 - 5.6

LEFT CORONARY ARTERY 3.82 - 6.09

LEFT ANTERIOR DESCENDING ARTERY

1.46 - 5.28

LEFT CIRCUMFLEX ARTERY 1.5 - 5.27

Page 6: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

CASE REPORT

A 39 year old female patient came complaints of -

Crushing type of chest pain lasting for 10 minutes, 3 episodes since 2007.

Associated with palpitations and giddiness.

K/C/O Hypertension for 7 years, under medication

--Patient underwent TREAD MILL TEST in 2007 and was diagnosed with Inducible Ischemia and is under medication. No further investigations have been done.

--Diabetes mellitus for two months.

She has no significant family history

Page 7: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

GENERAL EXAMINATION :

Afebrile.

No pallor/icterus/clubbing/cyanosis/lymphadenopathy/edema.

Blood pressure - 130/90 mm Hg. Pulse Rate - 82/min.

SYSTEM EXAMINATION:

CVS - S1, S2 +, no murmurs/thrill.

RS/CNS - No abnormality detected. P/A - soft, no organomegaly.

EXAMINATION

Page 8: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

INVESTIGATIONS In our case ,the patient underwent a Treadmill test in

2007 and was diagnosed with Induced ischemia.

Electrocardiogram:

T wave inversions in Leads III, V1-V5.

Echocardiogram :

Trivial tricuspid regurgitation Left ventricular function-normal No Regional wall motion abnormalities. Cardiac chambers - Normal.

Page 9: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

CHEST X-RAY

No significant abnormality seen.

Page 10: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

A) Normal ostium (yellow arrow) of left main coronary artery (LMCA) --Reduced caliber of Left main coronary artery -1.1mm (green arrow). --No plaque in the ostium or left main coronary artery. B) Proximal left anterior descending artery (LAD- red arrow). --Left circumflex artery (black arrow). --Diagonal branch of LAD (white arrow). --Ramus intermedia artery (blue arrow). --Tapering of mid and distal segments of LAD (violet arrow).

Page 11: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Vieussen’s Ring (white arrow). Right main coronary artery (black arrow). Conus branch (blue arrow).

Page 12: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Right main coronary artery and its branches were normal in course and caliber.

Left main coronary artery:

-Arising from the left main coronary sinus sharing a common ostium (1.6mm) with interventricular septal branch.

-Left main coronary artery is reduced in its caliber

(1.1mm) in its entire length(1.5cms) - It trifurcates in to Left anterior descending artery,

Ramus Intermedius artery and Left circumflex artery.

CORONARY COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ANGIOGRAM

Page 13: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Left anterior descending artery :

- Type III

- Gives two diagonal branches and are normal in opacification.

- Conus branch is seen arising from the right coronary sinus, separate from the right coronary artery ostium.

- It measures 3mm in caliber and coursing right to left anterior to pulmonary conus and anastamosing with

Left anterior descending artery distal to D1 branch - VIEUSSEN’S RING.

Page 14: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Left anterior descending artery : -proximal to anastamosis - 3mm -Between D1 and D2 branches -1.5 mm -After D2 branch(small in caliber)-1mm

Left circumflex artery - 1.6mm - Its bifurcates to two obtuse marginal

branches and they measure 1.4 and 1.2 mm each.

Ramus Intermedius artery: 2.2mm(normal in caliber)

Page 15: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Normal appearing right coronary artery (yellow arrow) with conus branch not cannulated.

CONVENTIONAL CORONARY ANGIOGRAM

Page 16: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

Non selective injection into left coronary sinus :

--Hypoplastic left main coronary artery (blue arrow).

--Hypoplastic mid and distal left anterior descending artery (green arrow).

--Normal caliber proximal left anterior descending artery (orange artery).

-- Diagonal branch of LAD (yellow arrow).

Page 17: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

INTRA-OPERATIVE FINDINGS

In the view of above symptoms, imaging findings and risk of sudden cardiac death the patient underwent below mentioned procedure.

Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting:-- 2 grafts were placed : a) Left internal mammary artery for D1 branch (1.5mm).b) Saphenous vein graft for Obtuse marginal artery (1.5mm).-Left anterior descending artery was too small to graft.

POST-OP period : Uneventful.

Page 18: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

CONCLUSION

Hypoplastic coronary artery disease (HCAD) is a very rare entity among the congenital coronary artery anomalies.

This unusual clinical entity has rarely been diagnosed in living individuals.

Most of them are asymptomatic and a high proportion experience sudden cardiac death.

Diagnosis is often made at autopsy.

Page 19: Congenital coronary artery anomalies are rare, often an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients.  They occur in 1% of all congenital heart disease

REFERENCES

1. Funabashi, N., Kobayashi, Y., Perlroth, M. and Rubin, G. Coronary Artery: Quantitative Evaluation of Normal Diameter Determined with Electron-Beam CT Compared with Cine Coronary Angiography—Initial Experience1. Radiology, (2003). 226(1), pp.263-271.

2. Ogden JA. Congenital anomalies of the coronary arteries. Am J Cardiol. 1970;25:474–9.

3. Roberts WC, Glick BN. Congenital hypoplasia of both right and left circumflex coronary arteries. Am J Cardiol 1992;70:121–3.

4. Zugibe FT, Zugibe FT Jr, Costello JT, et al. Hypoplastic coronary artery disease in the spectrum of sudden unexpected death in young and middle age adults. Am J Forensic Med Pathol 1993;14:276–83.

5. Go¨l MK, O¨ zatik MA, Kunt A, et al. Coronary anomalies in adult patients. Med Sci Monit 2002;8:CR636–41.

6. Casta A. Hypoplasia of the left coronary artery complicated by reversible ischemia in a newborn. Am Heart J 1987;114: 1238–41.

7. Angelini P, Velasco JA, Flamm S. Coronary anomalies: incidence, pathophysiology and clinical relevance. Circulation 2002;105:2449–54.