4.5 Article

Angiographic and clinical manifestations of coronary fistulas in Chinese people - 15-year experience

Journal

CIRCULATION JOURNAL
Volume 72, Issue 8, Pages 1242-1248

Publisher

JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOC
DOI: 10.1253/circj.72.1242

Keywords

congenital anomaly; coronary artery fistula; coronary artery lesions; heart failure; myocardial ischemia

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Background Coronary artery fistula (CAF) is an anomaly resulting in the steal phenomenon of coronary blood flow, which may cause morbidity or mortality. CAFs in Chinese patients after long-term follow-up of 15 years were retrospectively analyzed. Methods and Results From September, 1992 to August, 2007, 152 CAFs were detected in 28,210 coronary angiograms from 125 patients. Clinical and angiographic data of all patients were analyzed retrospectively. Two types of CAFs were characterized: type I in 99 patients with 124 solitary coronary to cardiac chamber or great vessel fistula; type H: 26 patients with 28 coronary artery-left ventricular multiple microfistulas. Single-, double-, and triple-CAFs were detected in 79%, 20%, and 1% of patients, respectively. Coexistent coronary lesions were noted in 41% of patients. Fistula-related symptoms included stable angina in 55, myocardial infarction in 2, heart failure in 2, sudden death with ventricular fibrillation in 1, and syncope in 1. Twenty-four patients had coexistent congenital anomalies. Only 9 patients underwent coronary intervention or/and surgery for CAFs. Conclusions CAFs may cause trivial or lethal cardiac events, and may coexist with coronary lesion or congenital anomaly. Coronary to cardiac chamber or great vessel fistula and coronary-left ventricular multiple microfistulas have different morphologic and pathological phenomena.

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