Coronary compression following percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation despite a negative balloon sizing test. Lessons learnt from this unusual complication

2021 
Abstract A 16-years-old male with prior diagnosis of situs inversus totalis and pulmonary atresia with interventricular communication underwent percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation 3 months after successful RVOT stenting following a negative balloon sizing test. Once finished the procedure, after consciousness recovery in the intensive care unit, the patient developed oppressive chest pain with very subtle electrocardiographic changes over his basal right bundle branch block . An urgent coronary angiography showed a severe stenosis in the proximal right coronary artery with TIMI 2 distal flow. Intravascular ultrasound imaging confirmed extrinsic compression. A 4 × 21 mm drug-eluting stent was successfully implanted relieving symptoms immediately. TIMI 3 flow was restored and good apposition and expansion were confirmed with intravascular ultrasound. A carefully review of the procedure showed that the pitfall responsible for this complication was the oversizing of the valve with respect to the size of the balloon used for the sizing test.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    6
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []