[Coronary ventricular fistulas in patients with heart transplants]
- PMID: 2026384
[Coronary ventricular fistulas in patients with heart transplants]
Abstract
In detailed angiographic follow-up examinations in patients after heart transplantation, coronary artery-ventricular fistulas were observed in two of ten patients. In one patient, in the first postoperative year, 19 right ventricular biopsy procedures were performed obtaining a total of 71 tissue specimens and one year after transplantation, additionally, three specimens were obtained from the left ventricle. Coronary angiography demonstrated a fistula from the first anterior ventricular branch of the right coronary artery into the right ventricle (Figure 1) as well as a second smaller fistula between from a septal perforator of the left anterior descending artery into the left ventricle. At follow-up angiography two months later, the fistulas were unchanged in site and extent (Figure 2). Angiographically there was diffuse hypokinesis of the right ventricle and moderate tricuspid regurgitation. In the second patient, in the first year after transplantation, 20 right ventricular biopsy procedures were performed obtaining a total of 80 tissue specimens. One year after transplantation coronary angiography showed a fistula between a septal perforator of the left anterior descending artery into the right ventricle (Figure 3) which, two months later, was unchanged in morphology and, as in the first case, the size of the shunt was small. Angiographically, there was moderate tricuspid regurgitation and apical hypokinesis of the left ventricle. If a relationship between the fistulas and biopsies is postulated, from a total 196 biopsy procedures obtaining 748 tissue specimens, the rate of this complication would be calculated at 1.5%. It cannot be ruled out, however, that the fistulas had been congenitally present in the donor hearts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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