Coronary artery fistula (CAF) or coronary arteriovenous fistula is a rare congenital or acquired anomaly of coronary arteries (CA) that involves an abnormal vascular communication between a CA and either a cardiac chamber (coronary-cameral fistula) or any segment of the systemic or pulmonary circulation (coronary-arteriovenous fistula), without an intervening capillary network [1].
A 42-year-old woman reporting palpitations, exertional chest pain, and dyspnea during ordinary physical exercise underwent a cardiologist consultation. Her physical examination showed a loud continuous murmur at the upper left sternal border. Electrocardiography (ECG) showed sinus rhythm, 64 bmp, Q waves in leads II, III, aVF, and signs of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy. TTE demonstrated dilated and slightly hypertrophied LV with normal contractile function. Additionally, aneurysmatic CA changes in the left main artery (LM) and left circumflex artery (LCx) were observed. Besides the above-mentioned findings, up to 12-mm wide communication between LCx and LV chambers just under the mitral valve (MV) posterior leaflet was noticed with big shunt flow through this communication (Figure 1A, Supplementary material, Videos S1, S2).
For clarification of TTE findings, computed tomography angiography (CTA) was performed. It demonstrated normal right coronary artery (RCA) but aneurysmatic (up to 18 mm in diameter) LM and widened proximal LCx segment. The LCx middle segment was curved, and the distal LCx segment entered the LV under the posterior MV leaflet (with fistula diameter of about 10 mm) (Figure 1B, C). The diagnosis of coronary-cameral fistula was confirmed while performing invasive coronary angiography (Figure 1D). After a multidisciplinary team decision, surgical ligation of the fistula was performed successfully. Postoperative CTA confirmed successful surgery (Figure 1E).
CAFs are uncommon CA abnormalities, accounting for 0.002% to 0.3% of the population, according to a series of studies [1]. The origin of CAFs can be any of the three major CAs and CAFs drainage sites commonly involve low-pressure structures: the right ventricle (41%), right atrium (26%), pulmonary artery (17%), coronary sinus (7%), left atrium (5%), left ventricle (3%) and superior vena cava (1%) [2].
Although most CAFs are asymptomatic, patients with larger CAFs, depending on whether the coronary steal syndrome is present and on the severity of the left-to-right shunt, have various symptoms, including mild dyspnea, fatigue, angina, congestive heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, and myocardial ischemia [3]. With a left-to-left shunt, the risk of left heart volume overload increases.
Although conventional invasive angiography historically has been considered the gold standard method for detection of CAFs, multidimensional CTA has emerged as a non-invasive and widely available alternative modality of choice [4].
Spontaneous closure of CAF is rare, thus the management strategy for patients with CAFs depends on the size of the fistula, presence of symptoms, anatomy of the fistula, the patient’s age, and presence of associated cardiovascular abnormalities. According to the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guidelines, percutaneous closure or surgical ligation is a class I recommendation for large fistula regardless of symptoms and for small-to-moderate-size fistula with symptoms, including myocardial ischemia, arrhythmia, ventricular dysfunction, ventricular enlargement, or endarteritis [5]. Regular follow-up is essential in patients with small asymptomatic CAFs and after CAF closure.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available at https://journals.viamedica.pl/kardiologia_polska.
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