1.Coronary-Subclavian Steal Syndrome Presenting with Ventricular Tachycardia.
Hurkan KURSAKLIOGLU ; Sedat KOSE ; Atila IYISOY ; Basri AMASYALI ; Turgay CELIK ; Kudret AYTEMIR ; Ersoy ISIK
Yonsei Medical Journal 2009;50(6):852-855
Coronary-subclavian steal through the left internal mammary graft is a rare cause of myocardial ischemia in patients who have had a coronary bypass surgery. We report a 70-year-old man who presented with sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia 5 years after the surgical creation of a left internal mammary to the left anterior descending artery. Cardiac catheterization illustrated that the left subclavian artery was occluded proximally and that the distal course was visualized by retrograde filling through the left internal mammary graft. Clinical ventricular tachycardia was reproducibly induced with a single ventricular extrastimulus, and antitachycardia pacing terminated the tachycardia. Restoration of blood flow by way of a Dacron graft placed between the descending aorta and the subclavian artery resulted in the total relief of symptoms. Ventricular tachycardia could not be induced during the control electrophysiologic study after surgical revascularization.
Aged
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Coronary Artery Bypass/adverse effects
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Coronary Artery Disease/*diagnosis/etiology/*pathology
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Humans
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Male
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Postoperative Complications/diagnosis/etiology
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Subclavian Steal Syndrome/*diagnosis/etiology/*pathology
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Tachycardia, Ventricular/*pathology
2.Effect of age and plaque morphology on diagnostic accuracy of dual source multidetector computed tomography coronary angiography
Hamza SUNMAN ; Kudret AYTEMIR ; Hikmet YORGUN ; Uur CANPOLAT ; Ali TAHER ; Edis DEMIRI ; Tuncay HAZROLAN ; Ergn B.KAYA ; Giray KABAK ; Lale TOKGZOLU ; Ali OTO
Journal of Geriatric Cardiology 2014;(2):106-112
Background Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) coronary angiography represents one of the most exciting technological revolutions in cardiac imaging and it has been increasingly used in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of age and coronary plaque calcification on diagnostic accuracy of MDCT. Methods The patients were examined by using dual-source MDCT and conventional coronary angiography. MDCT results were analyzed with regard to the severity (>50%stenosis) and morphology (non-calcified, mixed, or calcified) of coronary atherosclerotic plaques evaluated in a 16-segment model. Results In total, 181 patients (94 men and 87 women) with 2,687 coronary artery segments were examined with MDCT. Ninety three patients were older than 65 years of age (group A, 42 men) and 88 were younger (group B, 52 men). Two-hundred nine coronary artery segments (7.2%) were ex-cluded because of small distal coronary vessel segments and/or motion artifacts. The overall number of segments with non-diagnostic image quality was similar in both groups of patients. Of the 2,687 evaluated segments, 157 (5.8%) were significantly diseased, and 144 of them were correctly detected by MDCT. Diagnostic evaluation showed that the sensitivity, positive predictive value, specificity, and negative pre-dictive value were 89.5%, 62.5%, 96.0%, and 99.2%, respectively in group A, and 95.2%, 64.8%, 97.5%, and 99.8%in group B, respectively. In addition, detailed segment-based analyses in coronary segments with non-calcified, mixed and calcified plaques in both groups were simi-lar diagnostic accuracy. Conclusions Very high diagnostic accuracy observed in this study suggests that MDCT coronary angiography could be a suitable diagnostic tool for not only younger patients but also for older patients.