THE TRIPLE THREAT: A RARE CAUSE OF HEART FAILURE
Recommended Citation
Bonkowski T, Foglesong A, Jafri S, Saco RZ, Williams CT. THE TRIPLE THREAT: A RARE CAUSE OF HEART FAILURE. J Am Coll Cardiol 2024; 83(13):3228.
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
4-1-2024
Publication Title
J Am Coll Cardiol
Abstract
Background L-type transposition of the great vessels (L-TGA) is a congenital anomaly that is associated with anomalous coronary arteries. Here we present a unique case of L-TGA complicated by obstructive CAD and a malignant anomalous coronary artery presenting as new onset heart failure. Case A 66-year-old male presented to the emergency department from his primary care provider's office with chest pain and dyspnea. He was found to have an NSTEMI. Coronary angiography showed anomalous origin of the left coronary system from the right aortic cusp with three-vessel obstructive CAD. Surface echocardiogram showed L-TGA and a dilated systemic ventricle with an ejection fraction of 45%. Coronary CTA confirmed diffuse CAD with anomalous anatomy including a malignant course of the left circumflex artery between the great vessels. Decision-making The patient was transferred to a tertiary care center for advanced therapies. Right heart catheterization showed a low cardiac index. Cardiac MRI showed transmural infarct of the septum with a systemic ventricle ejection fraction of 35%. After a heart team discussion, he was ineligible for CABG due to his anomalous coronaries and a small systemic ventricle excluded him from ventricular assist device implantation. He was then optimized with GDMT and was discharged with plans for heart transplant evaluation. Conclusion This case represents a novel description of anomalous coronary anatomy complicated by a malignant course and severe CAD in an adult patient with L-TGA. [Formula presented]
Volume
83
Issue
13
First Page
3228