posted on 2020-10-21, 21:17authored byZiyad M. Binsalamah, Christopher Caldarone, Jeffrey Heinle
<p>A 14-year old boy was referred to the coronary artery anomalies program
after an incidental echocardiographic finding of a right coronary artery
(RCA) arising from the left coronary sinus. The patient was evaluated
and managed following a standardized approach: anatomy was determined by
computed tomography angiography (CTA) and myocardial perfusion by
stress cardiac magnetic resonance (sCMR). Patients with evidence of
myocardial ischemia are offered surgical repair.</p><p>The patient did not report symptoms of ischemia. Preoperative CTA showed
an RCA arising from the left coronary sinus with a 6 mm intramural
course and a slit-like orifice. Preoperative sCMR showed an inducible
subendocardial perfusion defect in the septum. Based on the findings of
ischemia, the patient was offered surgical repair. During surgery, it
was determined that coronary unroofing was not feasible as the coronary
passes behind the inter-coronary pillar which supports the aortic valve.
The decision was made to rei-mplant the RCA into the right coronary
sinus without attempting unroofing the intramural segment. The anomalous
RCA was transected as it exited the aortic root and the coronary stump
was then closed. The transected coronary was sutured into an appropriate
site within the right coronary sinus. After three months, the patient
remained asymptomatic and postoperative CTA showed an RCA arising from a
round, patent ostium within the right coronary sinus. Postoperative
sCMR at six months showed normal perfusion with no inducible defects.</p>