Abstract

A 51-year-old female with long-term poorly controlled hypertension was found to have a systolic murmur on physical examination. A transthoracic echocardiogram showed a bicuspid aortic valve with left ventricular hypertrophy and normal ejection fraction. Computed tomography (CT) detected a critical coarctation of the aorta (Panel A). The invasive gradient through the coarctation was 80 mmHg. It was decided to treat with stent implantation (Panels B and C). A covered cheatham-platinum stent of 39 mm mounted on a balloon-in-balloon balloon of 16 × 40 mm was successfully implanted. Immediately after stent deployment, the systolic blood pressure reached 210 mmHg, despite pharmacological treatment. The day after the procedure, the patient started with abdominal pain and an emergency CT scan was performed (Panel D). Computed tomography showed a large mesenteric haematoma (with no active bleeding at that moment), a large aneurysm of the proximal ileocolic artery, and a small aneurysm of the middle colic artery. Angiography confirmed these findings (Panel E) and it was decided to embolize both aneurysms using Micro Vascular Plugs and coils, which resulted in a successful exclusion of the aneurysms but also in a lack of vascularization of the distal ileum and ascending colon (Panel F), that eventually required resection (right hemicolectomy). The possibility of aneurysms and other alterations in the vessels of patients with aortic coarctation should be considered. Whether these anomalies should be treated before stenting is still unknown. Paradoxical hypertension after stent implantation and its severe complications could be prevented by pharmacological treatment days before the intervention.

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