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Description
Coronary artery fistulas are rare and estimated to occur in 0.002% of the overall population.1 Most patients remain asymptomatic, but angina, dyspnoea, arrhythmias or sudden death may arise.2
We report the case of a 65-year-old man with previous hypertension, angina and obesity, who presented to accident and emergency department with oppressive central chest pain initiated whilst driving. During initial observation he had a cardiac arrest in ventricular fibrillation, which was promptly treated. His cardiovascular physical examination did not show any abnormal signs. The 12 lead ECG showed sinus rhythm, Q waves in III and aVF, and T-wave inversion in I, aVL and V4–V6 leads. Blood tests revealed mild raised troponin I (4.2 ng/mL). Mild left ventricle dilation and apical hypokinesis were observed in the transthoracic echocardiogram. The patient was referred for an urgent coronary angiogram, which showed a large fistula between the very proximal segment of the left anterior descending artery and the pulmonary artery, with no significant coronary artery stenosis (figure 1 and video 1). A CT coronary angiogram confirmed this congenital tortuous vascular anomaly measuring 5 mm in diameter and 7 cm in length (figure 2). Cardiac MRI did not depict any areas of scar, late enhancement or oedema. Considering the clinical context and the size of the fistula, with no other obvious reason for the cardiac arrest, the symptoms were felt to be the result of a steal phenomenon and the patient was submitted to percutaneous closure of the fistula.
This case demonstrated how some coronary fistulas are not benign conditions and can present with myocardial ischaemia and malignant arrhythmias.
Learning points
This case shows that the first serious manifestation of a coronary artery fistula can be a life-threatening arrhythmia.
Despite being rare, this entity should be considered when dealing with patients who experience angina or sudden cardiac arrest.
It is commonly accepted that symptomatic patients and those who have large fistulas should be treated.3
Footnotes
This clinical case was presented and selected as finalist for the “Case-based session Club 35” Award Competition at EuroEcho Imaging 2014, Vienna, Austria
Contributors GA collected the data and wrote the manuscript. SN performed the catheterisation. All the authors were involved in this clinical case and contributed to the conception of the work, reviewed the manuscript for important intellectual content and gave final approval of this article.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.