Coronary steal syndrome caused by a large saphenous venous graft aneurysm with a fistula communicating to the right atrium managed by transcatheter closure

J Invasive Cardiol. 2023 Dec;35(12). doi: 10.25270/jic/23.00030.ABSTRACTA 71-year-old man with history of coronary artery disease status post coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in 1999 (left internal mammary artery-left anterior descending, saphenous venous graft [SVG]-diagonal, and SVG-right coronary artery [RCA], ascending aorta aneurysm [4.8 cm], infrarenal aorta aortic aneurysm status post endovascular aortic repair, heart failure with reduced ejection fraction of 25% status post cardiac resynchronization therapy-defibrillator) presented with decompensated heart failure. He was in monomorphic ventricular tachycardia; he was cardioverted and started on amiodarone and lidocaine. His vital signs remained stable.PMID:38108875 | DOI:10.25270/jic/23.00030
Source: The Journal of Invasive Cardiology - Category: Cardiology Authors: Source Type: research