Abstract

The aim of the work is to determine the peculiarities of the clinical course of Wellens syndrome due to the presence of critical occlusion of the medial segment of the anterior interventricular coronary artery bifurcation.Material and Methods. Clinical manifestations of the disease, including dynamics of ECG changes; coronary angiography data; results of echocardiographic and laboratory tests.Results. This article presents the peculiarities of the clinical course of Wellens syndrome in patient L., 70, who met the currently recognized diagnostic criteria of the syndrome, but the critical occlusion of the anterior interventricular branch of the left coronary artery was localized in its medial segment. Along with this, there was hemodynamically irrelevant stenosis of the proximal coronary artery section (60%). Electrocardiographic changes were consistent with pattern B (deeply inverted T waves in V2-V6). Сonditional normalization of the T waves, indicating the absence of repeated coronary artery occlusion after spontaneous reperfusion. Stenting of the anterior interventricular coronary artery vein of the left coronary artery prevented the possible occurrence of “stuttering” pattern and the occurrence of myocardial infarction.Conclusions. Acute coronary syndrome with complete coronary artery occlusion is often accompanied by spontaneous reperfusion, which contributes to the relief of chest pain and the appearance of characteristic T waves on ECG and is the basis of the so-called Wellens syndrome. The most frequent localization of coronary artery occlusion is the proximal segment of the anterior interventricular branch of the left coronary artery, but we witnessed the occlusion in the medial segment of these coronary arteries. Immediate coronary angiography with stenting of the occluded artery will prevent the occurrence of myocardial infarction in the patient.

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