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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 74, 455-460, Copyright © 1977 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
LA Gray Jr and DE McMartin
Considering the increasing number of patients with chest pain who undergo
routine coronary artery arteriography, coronary artery aneurysm may be
found more frequently. To know how to manage these aneurysms, we must
understand their possible complications. The aneurysms can produce symptoms
of angina or acute myocardial infarction by total thrombosis of the
aneurysm and vessel, embolism to the distal vessel, or progressive
enlargement and encroachment upon the distal vessel until it is occluded.
Moreover, the aneurysm may enlarge and rupture into the free pericardium or
produce a fistula by eroding into a chamber of the heart. The case
described herein may represent the first reported case of a coronary artery
aneurysm eroding into a cardiac chamber and causing an arteriovenous
fistula. The treatment of choice is resection of the aneurysm, closure of
the fistula, and re-establishment of continuity of the distal coronary
artery with a saphenous vein bypass graft.
ARTICLES
Surgical treatment of coronary artery aneurysm with rupture into the right atrium
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