Abstract

A 40-year-old postpartum woman with no relevant clinical history was admitted for myocardial infarction without ST segment elevation 12 days after a natural delivery. Emergency coronary angiography showed dissection of the first diagonal branch of the left anterior descending artery, an intermediate lesion in the second obtuse marginal branch of the circumflex artery, and severe stenosis in the right posterior descending artery (Figure 1, arrows). In the diagonal branch, intracoronary ultrasound and optical coherence tomography confirmed intramural hematoma (Figure 2A, asterisks) and an intimal flap (Figure 2A, arrows). Optical coherence tomography revealed an intramural hematoma causing stenosis of the obtuse marginal artery (Figure 2B, asterisk) but this finding was not confirmed in the posterior descending artery due to procedure failure (poor image quality). Two overlapping bioabsorbable stents were implanted in the diagonal side branch, with the end adjusted to the bifurcation. Another 2 overlapping bioabsorbable stents were positioned in the main left anterior descending artery, from the bifurcation along the length of the hematoma. The stents were inflated using the kissing balloon technique (Figure 3). 1 mm

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