Radiology Case Reports (Aug 2024)

Stable angina revealing a post-traumatic coronary cameral fistula: A case report

  • Nabil Zergoune,
  • Malak Benabdellah,
  • Loubna Hara,
  • Amine Ech-Chenbouli,
  • Zainab Raissouni

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
pp. 3522 – 3524

Abstract

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Coronary-cameral fistulas are abnormal connections between coronary arteries and any of the heart chambers, It may be acquired or congenital (whether isolated or along with congenital heart diseases); It is usually asymptomatic in younger patients; but with increasing age, symptoms begin to appear, and the incidence of complication rises. Coronary angiography is the gold standard in diagnosis but echography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging may be also useful. It can be treated medically with β-blockers or calcium channel blockers, but large fistulas with hemodynamic significant shunts should be closed by transcatheter or surgical means. We present a 57-year-old patient with a history of chest trauma, that present fistulas connecting the 3 coronary arteries to the left ventricle chamber complicated by myocardial ischemia causing stable angina.

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