REC: Interventional Cardiology (English Ed.) (Aug 2020)

Percutaneous reconstruction of pulmonary trunk to solve stent embolization

  • Álvaro Aparisi,
  • José Luis Zunzunegui,
  • Ignacio J. Amat-Santos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24875/RECICE.M19000088
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 226 – 227

Abstract

Read online

A 48-year-old woman with congenital pulmonary stenosis who required surgical valvuloplasty in 1978 presented with progressive dyspnea. The cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging performed confirmed the presence of dilated right ventricle, severe regurgitation, and pulmonary artery aneurysm (39 × 25 mm). The heart team decided to perform a transcatheter pulmonary valve implantation. During pre-stenting with an uncovered 15-25 mm × 47-55 mm CP Stent (NuMED, United States) mounted on a 25 mm balloon of the native right ventricular outflow tract, stent embolization with spontaneous anchoring to the left pulmonary artery occurred (video 1 of the supplementary data, and figure 1A). Since the patient remained stable, a wait-and-see approach was decided to facilitate stent endothelialization. The stent (figure 1B) was used as the anchoring substrate 2 months apart of the proximal implantation for 2 longer Andrastent XXL 57 mm-stents (Andramed, Germany) on a 30 × 40 mm XL AndraBalloon to create a landing zone for the 29 mm Sapien-3 valve. The rest of the procedure was successful (figure 1C). The patient remained asymptomatic, with no perfusion defects as confirmed by the ventilation/perfusion lung scan and a mean transvalvular gradient of 7 mmHg without any residual regurgitation at the 6-month follow-up (figure 1D).