• Title of article

    Tender Endothelium Syndrome: Combination of Hypotension, Bradycardia, Contrast Induced Chest Pain, and Microvascular Angina

  • Author/Authors

    Goberdhan, Shivesh Department of Internal Medicine - Kingston General Hospital - Queens University, Canada , Kwang Chiew, Soon Department of Cardiology - St. Catharines Hospital - McMaster University, Canada , Syed, Jaffer Department of Cardiology - St. Catharines Hospital - McMaster University, Canada

  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    1
  • To page
    5
  • Abstract
    Hypotension, bradycardia, and contrast induced chest pain are potential complications of cardiac catheterization and coronary angiography. Catheter-induced coronary spasm has been occasionally demonstrated, but its relationship to spontaneous coronary spasm is unclear. We describe a 64-year-old female who underwent coronary artery bypass surgery in 1998 on the basis of an angiographic diagnosis of severe left main disease, who recently presented with increasingly frequent typical angina. Repeat coronary angiography was immediately complicated by severe chest pain, hypotension, and bradycardia but demonstrated only mild disease of the left main artery and entire coronary tree with complete occlusion of her prior grafts. This reaction was almost identical to that observed during her original coronary angiogram. We now believe her original angiogram was complicated by severe catheter-induced left main spasm, with the accompanying contrast reaction attributed to left main disease, and the occlusion of coronary grafts explained by the absence of significant left main disease. The combination of these symptoms has not been documented in the literature. In this instance, these manifestations erroneously led to coronary bypass surgery. It is unknown whether routine, systematic injection of intracoronary nitroglycerin prior to angiography might blunt the severity of such reactions.
  • Keywords
    Tender Endothelium Syndrome , Hypotension , Bradycardia , Microvascular Angina
  • Journal title
    Case Reports in Cardiology
  • Serial Year
    2016
  • Record number

    2609064