Advances in Interventional Cardiology (Oct 2021)

Thin-strut bioresorbable-polymer sirolimus-eluting stent use for an optimal result of rescue coronary angioplasty in acute myocardial infarction failed thrombolytic therapy: the Bangladesh National Heart Foundation Annual Conference OCT-assisted live case

  • Fazila-Tun-Nesa Malik,
  • Ashok Dutta,
  • Dhiman Banik,
  • Tawfiq Shahriar Huq,
  • Muhammad Kalimuddin,
  • Filip Mikołajczyk,
  • Piotr Musialek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5114/aic.2021.109834
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
pp. 309 – 312

Abstract

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A 47-year-old man, smoker, was transferred to the Department of Cardiology Catheterization Laboratory at the National Heart Foundation (NHF) Hospital & Research Institute [1] in Dhaka, Bangladesh, from a remote hospital after streptokinase failure to reperfuse anterior ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI). The patient had presented in a local hospital with a severe retrosternal pain of 6-hour duration (transportation > 2 h). A diagnosis of anterior STEMI was made. The patient received i.v. morphine (8 mg) and intravenous streptokinase (STK, 1.5 million units i.v.) as the first-line reperfusion therapy in most areas of Bangladesh. Other medications were oral aspirin (300 mg), loading dose of generic clopidogrel (300 mg), and high-dose (80 mg) generic atorvastatin, all of which are now manufactured in the country.