Late Diagnosis of Congenital Aortic Coarctation Associated with CAD in Adults-Juniper Publishers
JUNIPER PUBLISHERS-OPEN ACCESS JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY &
CARDIOVASCULAR THERAPY
Coarctation of the aorta accounts for 5-8% of
congenital heart disease [1,2] and is treated usually in childhood. It
is not rare for aortic coarctation to be associated with coronary artery
disease [3] in patients past 35 years of age. Some patients with aortic
coarctation remain asymptomatic upto 30-40 years of age when the
occurrence of coronary artery disease increases. When both pathologies
coexist surgical management becomes particularly difficult.
Introduction
This is a 33 years male patient with a history of HTN
since early adulthood and recent onset type II DM. He presented to his
local area hospital with a new onset exertional retro-sternal chest pain
radiating to the back and left shoulder, and relieved by rest.
Accordingly he was referred to a cardiologist who initially treated him
medically, and tried to control his high B.P, which was quite high at
that time, however despite being compliant on 3 antihypertensive
medications, he continued to suffer from these pains, that significantly
limited his activities, and his BP remained uncontrolled. Finally he
was admitted with a severe chest pain at reston 11/12/2012, without
significant ECG changes, but with marked Troponin elevation, and he was
diagnosed as NSTEMI. Because of recurrent chest pains, he was
transferred to our institute for coronary angiography, which was done on
15/1/2013 through the Rt radial approach, which is the standard
approach in our cath lab, however the, 0.035 guide wire went through a
strange tortuous curve from the Rt SCA. We tried to use an RJ 4
diagnostic catheter to manipulate the guide wire into the ascending AO,
but it didn’t work.
So a small hand injection was done in this tortuous
vessel after the catheter was advanced downward and it showed a large
tortuous vessel that came off the huge RIMA. AT that moment we suspected
the presence of coarctation of AO, and we decided to go through the
femoral approach and to introduce a pig tail catheter, which was
advanced up to the thoracic descending AO.
but the guide wire could not be advanced further, so
the wire was withdrawn and 50 cc of iso-osmolar contrast was injected,
and revealed a severe discrete post Lt subclavian artery COA, with
failure of opacification of the arch and descending AO. And despite
several trials using a terumo hydrophilic, and PTCA floppy wires, we
failed to cross the tight discrete COA narrowing. His ECHO showed a
normal LV size and function without hypertrophy, and the Descending
thoracic AO. Showed a tight COA distal to Left SCA, with a PG of 35 mmHg
and diastolic tail. Finally we decided to do CT angiography to confirm
the diagnosis of coarctation, and also to assess the coronary arteries,
and it showed a severe discrete post-SCA COA and severe 3 vessel CAD in
the form of totally occluded LAD, bifurcating with a big D1 which showed
a severe ostial lesion, moderate OM1 lesion and tight mid RCA lesion.
We had a long discussion about the management plan of
this patient, as being a diabetic patient with 3 vessel disease, we
know that there is an accumulating data favoring the long term results
of CABG Vs PCI in such patients, but the presence of COA in our case
complicates the decision, and finally we decided to do staged
percutaneous approach starting first with fixing his coronaries followed
by COA stenting in a later session. Coronary angiography was done on
3/3/2013, through left radial approach, due to straighter course towards
the ascending AO, confirmed the CT findings, and he had 2 DES, for LAD
and using crush technique, and another 1 DES for the RCA, and he
was discharged after a couple of days. In the next follow up visit,
he reported great improvement, so the next step was to treat
his COA which was done under G.A on 31/3/2013. Angiography
showed a tight COA with a diameter of 4 mm, and a peak to peak
gradient of 60 mmHg. During rapid ventricular pacing, the COA
segment was stented using a 15Ë£35 mm CP covered stent with
resolving of the gradient between ascending and descending AO.
Patients with congenital Aortic coarctation and associated
coronary artery disease pose unique therapeutic challenges and
there are few reports in the literature addressing this issue. In our
case, the initial question was whether to proceed with surgical
repair of COA, and CABG, or a percutaneous stenting approach
for both, or a hybrid approach of COA stenting followed by CABG.
A single stage surgical repair of aortic coarctation and coronary
artery bypass grafting has been reported in the literature, [4]
however, this approach might expose the patient for higher risk.
The most feared complication of aortic surgery is paraplegia
and risk of spinal cord injury. The risk of these complications
increases with prolonged aortic cross-clamp time. Other surgical
difficulties include need for extensive mobilization of the aorta,
control of collateral blood vessels, and damage to the recurrent
laryngeal or phrenic nerves [5]. A repair of aortic coarctation
through a left thoracotomy after coronary artery bypass grafting
can reduce the risk of complications in patients with late
presentation of coarctation.
Another dilemma is conventional CABG under
cardiopulmonary bypass through a median sternotomy, as the
associated coarctation may make cardiopulmonary bypass
difficult, especially in a patient with pre-subclavian coarctation.
Even though cardiopulmonary bypass has been used in an adult
with untreated coarctation [6], important questions need to
be addressed regarding the site of placement of the arterial
return cannula. However despite these concerns there some
case reports in the literature One of these reports is a series
of 3 patients, with a mean age of 60 years, 2 were males and
one female patient, but because the primary problem in all 3
patients was angina, and 2 patients had atypical forms of aortic
obstruction, the first patient had a near interruption of the presubclavian
transverse arch, and the third patient had a longsegment
aortic obstruction, possibly due to aortitis where stents
have not been documented to be safe in these settings, they
decided to tackle the coronary artery disease first with off pump
CABG as none of the three patients had a coronary anatomy that
was suitable for angioplasty.
Given the circumstances, and despite the high risk of
the
procedure was remarkably well tolerated, with surprisingly
little morbidity. Also there is one case report of staged surgical
approach for a 37 years patient, who had CABG first followed but
repair of coarctation after 8 weeks, although the procedure was
uneventful, the patient was exposed to 2 major procedure in less
than 2 months, making it difficult to be applied on a large scale,
especially in older patients [7]. One of the options we considered
in our patient was to repair the coarctation first and then do the
CABG in the usual manner. However, in the setting of unstable
angina with critical coronary blocks, intra-operative ischemia
was a real danger. Hence, this approach was not favored as we
felt that in untreated coarctation, it is not advisable to sacrifice
the internal mammary artery, which is an important source of
collateral flow to the distal aorta.
Also during the subsequent coarctation repair, clamping
of the left subclavian artery would be hazardous with a left
internal mammary artery graft in place. Aortic coarctation (CoA)
is reported to predispose to coronary artery disease (CAD).
However, our clinical observations do not support this premise.
Our objectives were to describe the prevalence of CAD among
adults with CoA and to determine whether CoA is an independent
predictor of CAD or premature CAD.
The study population was derived from the Quebec
Congenital Heart Disease Database. We compared patients with
CoA and those with a ventricular septal defect, who are not
known to be at increased risk of CAD. The prevalence of CAD in
patients with CoA compared with those with ventricular septal
defect was determined. We then used a nested case-control
design to determine whether CoA independently predicted for
the development of CAD. Of 756 patients with CoA who were
alive in 2005, 37 had a history of CAD compared with 224 of
6481 patients with ventricular septal defect (4.9% versus 3.5%;
P=0.04). Male sex (odds ratio [OR], 2.13; 95% confidence interval
[CI], 1.62-2.80), hypertension (OR, 1.95; 95% CI, 1.44-2.64),
diabetes mellitus (OR, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.09-2.58), age (OR per 10-
year increase, 2.28; 95% CI, 2.09-2.48), and hyperlipidemia (OR,
11.58; 95% CI, 5.75-23.3) all independently predicted for the
development of CAD. CoA did not independently predict for the
development of CAD (OR, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.68-1.57) or premature
CAD (OR for CoA versus ventricular septal defect, 1.44; 95% CI,
0.79-2.64) after adjustment for other factors.
Conclusion
Although traditional cardiovascular risk factors
independently predicted for the development of CAD, the
diagnosis of CoA alone did not. Our findings suggest that
cardiovascular outcomes of these patients may be improved
with tight risk factor control.Conclusion
For more articles in Open Access Journal of Cardiology & Cardiovascular
Therapy please
click on:
https://juniperpublishers.com/jocct/index.php
https://juniperpublishers.com/jocct/index.php
Comments
Post a Comment