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A particular case of anterior STEMI in a young patient with an unexpected outcome
Author(s) -
Eugen Țieranu,
Radu Stavaru,
Alexandru Rocșoreanu,
Constantin Militaru,
Ionuţ Donoiu,
Octavian Istrătoaie
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
romanian journal of cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2734-6382
pISSN - 1220-658X
DOI - 10.47803/rjc.2020.30.3.459
Subject(s) - medicine , timi , cardiology , thrombus , myocardial infarction , occlusion , chest pain , artery , right coronary artery , coronary arteries , percutaneous coronary intervention , coronary angiography
Contact address: Alexandru Rocsoreanu, Department of Cardiology, Clinical Emergency Hospital, Craiova, Romania. E-mail: rocsoreanu_alexandru@yahoo.com 1 University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Craiova, Romania 2 Department of Cardiology, Clinical Emergency Hospital, Craiova, Romania Abstract: Anterior STEMI (ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction) is associated with the worst prognosis of all infarction locations. We report the case of a 37-year-old male patient who presented for two hours of severe chest pain and was diagnosed with Killip I anterior STEMI in the emergency room. The emergency coronary angiogram revealed acute thrombotic ostial LAD (left anterior descending artery) occlusion and acute thrombotic ostial ramus intermedius (RI) nearocclusion. Thrombus aspiration for the LAD occlusion was performed and a large thrombus was extracted, followed by the artery’s reperfusion. However, we noticed that there was a large diagonal branch providing septal perforating arteries and that there was a distal LAD occlusion. We implanted a drug-eluting stent on the site of the proximal LAD lesion, but we could not obtain any fl ow in the distal occluded LAD. The patient underwent dual antiplatelet and unfractionated heparin treatment, and, 8 days later, we performed another coronary angiogram. To our surprise, there was very few residual thrombi in the previously occluded LAD segment, and there was no more thrombus in the RI. We noticed TIMI 3 fl ow in all coronary arteries and an increase in the patient’s left ventricular ejection fraction was also recorded.

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