We report a case of repeated coronary artery spasm with myocardial injury in a 37-year-old woman with the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. This patient did not have a medical history of cardiac-related illness or risk factors for coronary artery disease. The presence of eosinophil granule major basic protein in otherwise normal-appearing myocardial tissue, along with normal plasma levels of tryptophan metabolites, suggests that the mechanism of vasospasm in this patient might involve toxic eosinophil proteins or focal myocardial lesions, but not the production of excess tryptophan metabolites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCathet Cardiovasc Diagn
March 1989
Visualization of the coronary arteries during all phases of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty using hand-held contrast media injection devices is suboptimal. Power injection of contrast media for diagnostic coronary cineangiography has been performed in over 18,000 cases without power injector complication. Here we report our experience with 294 patients using power injection for visualization during all phases of PTCA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCathet Cardiovasc Diagn
February 1989
An anomalous left main coronary artery with passage between the right ventricular infundibulum and aortic root has been incriminated as the causation of sudden death in a small number of individuals, many of whom are quite young. Mechanical features such as angulation and compression are most often incriminated. A 59-year-old man with such a coronary anomaly who had chest pain at rest, ST segment elevation, and ventricular tachycardia, but who had no evidence of effort-related myocardial ischemia, is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree patients presented to the cardiac catheterization laboratory with myocardial infarction, severe mitral regurgitation, and pulmonary edema. Two patients were in cardiogenic shock at the time of cardiac catheterization. Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty was done on the occluded artery in all three patients with resolution of the pulmonary edema as well as auscultative evidence of mitral regurgitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 27-year-old man had recurrent myocardial infarction found to be due to coronary embolism to the left main coronary artery with downstream embolization. The presumed etiology of thromboembolism was idiopathic cardiomyopathy. A unique method of treatment with Fogarty catheter retrieval was used.
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