Patient: Female, 73-year-old
Final Diagnosis: Coronary subclavian steal syndrome
Symptoms: Arrhythmia • dyspnea
Medication: —
Clinical Procedure: Stenting
Specialty: Cardiology
Objective:
Rare coexistence of disease or pathology
Background:
Coronary subclavian steal syndrome (CSSS) is an uncommon condition in which a high-grade stenosis of the subclavian artery proximal to an internal mammary artery bypass graft results in retrograde blood flow of the bypass graft. This report is of CSSS in a 73-year-old woman who presented with ventricular tachycardia and angiographically confirmed subclavian artery stenosis proximal to the left internal mammary artery (LIMA) bypass graft 3 years following coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).
Case Report:
The patient was a 73-year-old woman with a past medical history of multivessel coronary artery disease, found on preoperative evaluation. She underwent 2 vessel CABG in 2018. She was found to have ischemic cardiomyopathy, ejection fraction of 30% to 35% despite revascularization, and an implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD). Three years following uncomplicated CABG, the patient presented with angina and sustained ventricular tachycardia; ICD therapy was unsuccessful. Ischemia was the etiology of the sustained ventricular tachycardia, and the patient underwent cardiac catheterization, demonstrating high-grade subclavian artery stenosis proximal to the LIMA bypass graft. Intervention of the 80% lesion of the native left anterior descending artery was done with placement of a 2.75×16-mm drug-eluting stent. The patient responded well to treatment, with no subsequent ventricular tachycardia on outpatient follow-up.
Conclusions:
This report has shown that in patients who present with symptoms of acute coronary syndrome and a history of CABG involving the LIMA, the possibility of CSSS should be considered and investigated by coronary artery imaging so that diagnosis and management are not delayed.
Introduction:
Gemella morbillorum is a facultative anaerobic gram positive bacterium that resides as normal flora in the oral cavity and gastrointestinal system. This organism has uncommonly presented as an etiology of infective endocarditis, with varying reports of resistance and complications.
Methods:
Transparent Reporting of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed for the systematic review. A medical librarian (T.R.S) versed in evidence-based medicine systematically searched databases for studies assessing Gemella morbillorum infective endocarditis in patients. Publication year included inception until December 31, 2019. Using Rayyan software, 134 abstracts were screened for eligibility after duplicates were removed. Inclusion criteria was age greater than 18 years old, infective endocarditis with positive culture for Gemella morbillorum, and publication in English. 39 full text articles were reviewed for eligibility, and 38 were included in the final analysis.
Results:
A total of 40 cases of infective endocarditis caused by Gemella morbillorum were identified. The average age of the patients was 54 years old, 72.5% were male patients (29), 20% female (8), 7.5% unknown sex (3). Native valve endocarditis (NVE) was present in 28 of the cases, with prosthetic valve involvement in 5 cases. Left sided endocarditis was more common than right sided with 70% of cases (28) and 12.5% (5) respectively, with 17.5% (7) of cases not listing which valve was infected on echocardiography. The most common predisposing risk factor was thought to be poor dentition in 9 cases. The most common antibiotic regimen in penicillin susceptible NVE was concordant with most recent guidelines, a beta lactam with gentamicin or vancomycin in 57.5% of the cases (23). Complications occurred in 65% of cases (26), with most common complication being need for surgical intervention occurring in 30% of the cases (12).
Conclusions:
Gemella morbillorum infective endocarditis cases reported in literature had a high burden of complications with nearly two thirds of cases. Most common was the need for surgery with valve replacement. Antibiotic regimens in the most recent endocarditis guidelines were effective in treatment for a majority of the cases.
Pulmonary vein thrombosis (PVT) is an uncommon and often undiagnosed condition with symptoms ranging from completely asymptomatic to life threatening systemic arterial embolization. Complications include pulmonary edema, infarction and Cor Pulmonale secondary to increased pulmonary venous pressures leading to pulmonary hypertension. Malignancy is a known risk factor for PVT and is theorized that it results as a possible direct extension of tumor in vein, direct compression or epithelial damage from tumor invasion.
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