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A 65-year-old woman presented with acute central chest pain. Her ECG showed inferior ST elevation and she was transferred to our cardiac catheterisation laboratory for primary percutaneous coronary intervention. Coronary angiography showed no obstructive coronary atheroma, though a foreign body appeared to be lodged within the heart (panel A). The following morning her troponin T level was raised at 1.15 ng/ml.
A Port-O-Cath had previously been inserted via the right subclavian vein as part of the treatment of breast carcinoma. Thoracic CT demonstrated a fragment of the catheter lying across the fossa ovalis. There was no evidence of pulmonary thromboembolism or recurrence of the breast carcinoma. Transoesophageal echocardiography suggested thrombus was adherent to the fragment within the right atrium. After 1 weeks treatment with heparin, thrombus was still visible. As we considered percutaneous retrieval might cause systemic embolism, the fragment was removed under direct visualisation through a longitudinal right atriotomy while the patient was on cardiopulmonary bypass (panel B). At operation, most of the catheter fragment was seen within the left atrium without any visible thrombus attached; the patent foramen ovale was repaired and the remainder of the Port-O-Cath removed. The patient has remained asymptomatic.
Catheter fracture usually results from compression of implanted catheters lying between the first rib and the clavicle. We suspect that the acute presentation was secondary to paradoxical thromboembolism to the coronary circulation. As far as we know, this is the first report of migration of a fractured venous catheter across a patent foramen ovale resulting in acute myocardial infarction.
Acknowledgments
This article has been adapted from Robinson Simon D, Hall Jim, Goodwin Andrew T. An unexpected finding during planned primary percutaneous coronary angioplasty Heart 2007;93:1392