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CABG: Venous Disease

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Okay, the next case is a younger patient

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who in their fifties had had a bypass graft

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and had some new symptoms.

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So we're taking a look and we know that there's a cabbage.

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And even without looking at a full field of view,

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you can see that the rema is unused.

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The lima is already off the chest wall.

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Uh, and so it comes down little noisier, um, happens

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with larger patients.

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So you can see that the Lima is patent

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and there's your touchdown.

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The runoff looks okay.

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Um, and then I'll look for the next graft and whoop.

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So this, uh, I'm looking along the aortic wall.

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You can sometimes see cannulation sites. That's fine.

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So clips, but here is a, um, a view of

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what should be a bypass graft,

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but just a little nubbin that's remaining on the aorta.

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And then, um, we are seeing that the vessel's occluded.

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I'm just gonna show you, uh, via long axis, uh,

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what I see pretty well on the axials just to lay it out.

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And so here is a venous bypass graft occlusion.

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The distal vessel is kind of very calcified, um,

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but I don't really see any contrast

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that actually highlights the danger of a mip.

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It looks like it's contrast, but it's just calcium.

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Um, if you look at the volume

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rendered, it kind of corroborates.

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So the lima got cut off by the algorithm here,

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but I'm really more showing you this for the,

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seeing the short OTE segment that's patent.

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And then everything else is occluded in the, uh,

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circumflex venous bypass graft.

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Uh, so occluded graft and then sticking with the left.

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We do see that there as not unexpected,

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but a lot of disease in the left main

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and probably a distal occlusion.

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I'll show you that in another plane just since it's good

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to get familiar with left main disease.

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It's not a surprise here. It clearly was, uh, expected

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or known because we have bypass grafts,

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but this is what a severe left main stenosis looks like.

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Uh, and lots of calcium, lots of noncalcified plaque.

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We find that the native arteries tend to calcify

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after they're bypassed, so it's really not surprising.

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And then just falling the circumflex down,

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you can see why they had to bypass it.

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There was a lot of disease in the native artery.

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Unfortunately that bypass graft went down

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and that's a really good use for ct.

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So very appropriate indication to check bypass grafts.

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Unfortunately, I'm looking at the RCA

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and uh, this lays it out pretty nicely actually,

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and I lose that vessel.

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I don't recall seeing any vi bypass graft,

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so I'm just gonna mip it.

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So you can see it's near osteo occlusion of the RCA

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and um, a lot of disease.

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So I, if I was reading this, I would comment,

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I would comment the length.

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I would note that the distal vessel does appear to be patent

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and does give rise to a PDA and PLV.

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So this dominant right coronary artery

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with a long segment occlusion, probably chronic,

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but we'd need to know history or a prior cath.

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Um, and, uh, really no, um, no grafts

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to the right side that, that I'm identifying right here.

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Uh, the nice option at least you have is rema if you wanna

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do a repeat surgery and things.

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I might also look at, just since I'm here, look at

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The wall thickness so the myocardium is

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all alive and well.

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Um, not saying anything about function,

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but there's at least some myocardium preserved,

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maybe a touch of thinning in places,

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but no reason to think it's a totally, um,

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non-viable myocardium, at least at this point.

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Let's pop over and take a look at the angiographic results.

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There we go. Okay, so the cannulation site is, uh,

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into the Lima graft

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and you can see that the touchdown and runoff are patent.

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Let's see if I can find an injection

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of the left main itself.

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So now the catheter is looped around the, uh,

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vessel into the left main,

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and I guess I'm one frame further than I ought to be.

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I wanna show you the stenting, or at least the wiring.

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So they elected to treat maybe the circumflex.

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So instead of going after the bypass graft,

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we're can see here a wire in the left main into the LAD

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and then a, a stent being deployed in the circumflex.

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We were also worried about the right coronary artery,

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so I'll try to find something there.

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Some of these procedures can be very intensive.

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Let's see how they're doing this far into the case.

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Still stenting. And it looks here like they started

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to deploy some stents into the circumflex with good result.

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And now look how well that's opened up.

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So we know there's a bypass graph to the distal LED, uh,

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or at least the mid LED.

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And then, uh, integrate flow now from the left main into

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that circumflex, which is wired.

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So restored flow.

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Um, I don't see any image of the RCI,

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I think they decided to hold off on that one.

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Um, until a separate per, yeah, they had a second cath.

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So, uh, good result in the end over a couple of sessions.

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Um, but the important thing to remember teaching, um,

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pointwise on this case is, uh,

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make sure you systematically look through, right.

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Look at arterial graft first, then venous grafts.

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Once you see a venous graft that's down, look at the sites.

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And so you're, there's just an oven, a really,

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a long segment and very calcified, uh, graft occlusion.

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So that's not something that would be easy to cross

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for such a long, need a lot of stents to.

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Um, so they decided to go

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and revascularize the totally occluded circumflex branches.

Report

Faculty

Brian Ghoshhajra, MD, MBA, MSCCT

Academic Chief, Cardiovascular Imaging and Associate Chair, Operations Analytics

Massachusetts General Hospital / Harvard Medical School

Tags

Vascular

Coronary arteries

Cardiac CT (SCCT Cat B1 Video Case)

Cardiac

CTA

CT

Angiography