Journal of Community Hospital Internal Medicine Perspectives (Mar 2021)

Gadolinium-based coronary angiography in a patient with prior known anaphylaxis to iodine-based dye

  • Nirmal Guragai,
  • Sherif Roman,
  • Rahul Vasudev,
  • Upamanyu Rampal,
  • Preet Randhawa,
  • Fayez Shamoon,
  • Hartaj Virk,
  • Mahesh Bikkina,
  • JW Moses,
  • Apurva Motivala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/20009666.2021.1890337
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. 286 – 288

Abstract

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Gadodiamide is a gadolinium-based chemical element that is considered safe and well tolerated in patients without renal dysfunction and is therefore routinely used as a contrast agent in magnetic resonance imaging. Although radio-opaque, it is not frequently used for coronary angiography due to its less than optimal image quality and prohibitive cost. Our center’s previous experience was less than satisfactory but the addition of a power injection system yielded good quality diagnostic images. We report a case of 63 years old male with a known history of severe, life-threatening anaphylactic reaction to previous iodinated dye presenting with persistent angina despite optimal medical therapy. Coronary and bypass graft angiography was performed using 24 cc of undiluted Gadodiamide (OMNISCAN) with a power injector (ACIST®) without any incidents or premedication with an interpretable angiogram.

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