A 67-year-old man presented complaining of unstable angina. Coronary angiography revealed 50% stenosis of the left main trunk of the left coronary artery and a coronary artery aneurysm in the left anterior descending artery (LAD) #6. Furthermore, significant stenosis was noted in the peripheral LAD #7 and #9.The patient had hepatitis C, probably due to an earlier transfusion, and was suffering from liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh classification grade A) and advanced thrombocytopenia.We anastomosed the saphenous vein graft (SVG) to the LAD and diagonal branch by off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting; we did not treat the aneurysm. There were no postoperative complications and the patient's progress was good. On postoperative coronary angiography, the aneurysm was occluded and the patency of the SVG was satisfactory.
The evaluation of coronary arteries has become easier, with regard to postoperative coronary artery bypass grafting(CABG)evaluation through the development of multidetector computed tomography (MDCT). In this study, MDCT and coronary angiography(CAG)were performed for graft assessment after CABG, and the usefulness and assessment capability of MDCT were examined. We examined the morphology of graft stenosis and obstruction in 63 cases(51 men, 12 women, mean age 66 years old) in whom comparison by MDCT and CAG was possible. We used 49 grafts for LITA and 65 grafts for SVG (mean number of anastomoses 2.8). The graft evaluation was possible in all cases in CAG, but it was difficult to evaluate due to artifacts in 5 cases in MDCT. MDCT is less invasive than CAG and is useful for early postoperative assessment of CABG. Also, MDCT allows evaluation of the anastomotic region which can be difficult to evaluate from many directions in CAG, by building an image by the VR, MIP and MPR method. It was particularly useful for evaluation of the form of the whole graft and anastomotic region form by the curved MPR method. Further advance in the evaluation of coronary and bypass graft will depend on future developments in scaning methods and instrument improvements. Jpn. J.
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