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Transcatheter occlusion of giant congenital coronary cameral fistulae: a case series.

BACKGROUND: A coronary cameral fistula is a rare connection between a coronary artery and a cardiac chamber or vein bypassing the cardiac capillary bed system. Most of these fistulae are congenital and solitary, although they can be acquired and multiple.

CASES PRESENTATION: Case 1: A 10-year-old black South African boy presented with a long-standing history of fatigue; he had a heart murmur, and a bounding pulse and wide pulse pressure. An echocardiogram demonstrated a large coronary cameral fistula involving his left coronary artery and his left ventricle. This was also confirmed on ascending aortogram. Surgical ligation was done and his symptoms improved afterward, but a small residual fistula remained. Case 2: A 7-year-old black South African boy had decreased effort tolerance and a heart murmur on the mid-sternal border. He had cardiomegaly on chest roentgenogram and a dilated left coronary artery origin on echocardiogram. An ascending aortogram confirmed a large left coronary cameral fistula draining to the left ventricle. Case 3: A 28-year-old black South African woman with decreased effort tolerance and chest pain on exertion had a continuous murmur over the lower sternal border. Echocardiography demonstrated a dilated right coronary artery with a fistulous connection to her right ventricle. An ascending aortogram demonstrated a tortuous coronary cameral fistula arising from her right coronary artery to her right ventricle. All three patients were successfully treated percutaneously using the Amplatzer vascular plug type II device.

CONCLUSION: The availability of numerous vascular closure devices has made transcatheter occlusion the treatment of choice for the majority of coronary cameral fistulae, rather than the traditional surgical ligation.

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