Abstract

Abstract We describe the case of a 39–year–old woman with a history of recent natural birth, who came to our observation for an episode of oppressive chest pain while breastfeeding her baby at night. At the entrance, the electrocardiographic and echocardiographic findings and myocardiocitonecrosis enzymes were normal; after three hours the second enzymatic determination was clearly increased, so the patient was admitted to our ICU with a diagnosis of SCA / NSTEMI. She was therefore subjected to coronary angiography with a small hematoma in the distal tract of the marginal branch without flow limitation; it was therefore decided, in accordance with the AHA and ESC guidelines, for a conservative medical therapy. On the third day of hospitalization, the patient presented recurrence of chest pain with electrocardiographic evidence of ST segment elevation in the anterolateral site. A new angiographic evaluation was therefore performed urgently, showing a complete retrograde dissection from the marginal branch to the circumflex branch and to the anterior descending branch with TIMI 0–1 flow. During the procedure the patient underwent a prolonged hypotensive episode associated with frequent polymorphic ventricular ectopic beats, with rapid evolution towards a picture of overt cardiogenic shock. Therefore we proceeded quickly to perform PTCA with placement of medicated stents on all branches involved in the dissection, with rapid improvement of the haemodynamic picture. Spontaneous coronary dissections represent for a hemodynamist a condition of great technical difficulty where the margins of error are very high. Thanks to the technological evolution of materials, an experienced hemodynamist is able, more and more easily, to be successful in the revascularization procedure and to resolve extremely serious clinical pictures. This case report describes a spontaneous coronary dissection that most often occurs in young women in good health and without risk factors for coronary heart disease, particularly in the peripartum period. The presentation was similar to an acute coronary syndrome. According to AHA and ESC guidelines, therapy was conservative if dissection / hematoma is not a flow restriction with coronary angiography after a few days to demonstrate vessel restoration.

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