Radiology Case Reports (Apr 2022)

Traumatic left main coronary artery dissection in a young adult following blunt chest trauma – A case report

  • Selen Bayraktaroğlu, MD,
  • Mohammad Nawaz Nasery, MD,
  • Naqibullah Foladi, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 4
pp. 1190 – 1193

Abstract

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Blunt chest trauma may cause variable degrees of thoracic injuries. Most of the patients may remain asymptomatic after sustaining blunt chest trauma. But in rare instances, life-threatening conditions such as coronary artery dissection may occur. The authors present a 29-year-old male adult with persistent chest pain following blunt trauma with a rise in cardiac troponins and elevated ST segment in ECG. Coronary CT and conventional angiography demonstrated dissection of the left main coronary artery. It is deemed necessary to suspect cardiac injury in patients with a history of blunt chest trauma in appropriate clinical settings. Early recognition of coronary artery dissection is vital to reduce morbidity and mortality. ECG combined with cardiac enzymes can be essential tools helping the physicians raise the suspicion towards a cardiac injury followed by cross-sectional and conventional angiographies for confirmation.

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