Very late stent thrombosis complicating a previously lost and partially crushed stent:
Demonstration by optical coherence tomography
☆
Rocco A. Montone, Leonardo Cataneo, Silvia Minelli, Giampaolo Niccoli ⁎
Institute of Cardiology, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, 00168 Rome, Italy
abstract article info
Article history:
Received 31 May 2012
Received in revised form 3 August 2012
Accepted 13 August 2012
Keywords:
Stent thrombosis
crushed stent
optical coherence tomography
Stent thrombosis (ST) is the most dramatic complication of coronary stenting. Mechanisms of ST are multiple,
including procedural and patient-related factors. A considerable burden of metal inside the coronary has been
associated with ST as suggested by the higher rate of ST in case of multiple overlapping or complex two stents
procedure in bifurcation lesions. However, occasional stent loss and failure to retrieve it may be a substrate of
ST, especially if multiple layers of stent struts are incompletely crushed. Here, we describe a case of very late
ST on a partially crushed stent previously lost inside the coronary circulation, using optical coherence
tomography (OCT) for guidance during the procedure.
© 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Stent thrombosis (ST) is the most dramatic modality of stent
failure as it causes acute coronary syndrome in most cases.
Mechanisms of ST are multiple, including procedural and patient-
related factors [1]. The burden of metal inside the coronary has been
associated with ST as suggested by the higher rate of ST in case of
multiple overlapping or complex two stents procedure in bifurcation
lesions [2]. However, occasional stent loss and failure to retrieve it
may be a substrate of ST, especially if multiple layers of stent struts are
incompletely crushed. Here, we describe a case of ST on a partially
crushed stent previously lost inside the coronary circulation.
A 74 year-old woman was admitted to our emergency depart-
ment with severe dyspnoea, inverted T-waves on antero-lateral EKG
leads and increased Troponin T (0.12 ng/ml). She suffered from
hypertension, dyslipidemia and had a previous history of coronary
artery bypass (saphenous vein graft [SVG] for left anterior descend-
ing artery [LAD] and right coronary artery [RCA]) four years before,
and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with a bare-metal
stent stent (BMS, Driver stent, Medtronic, Santa Clara, USA, 2.75 ×
24 mm) implantation in the mid-left circumflex coronary artery
(LCx) two years before. After PCI, the patient remained on aspirin
100mg/d, clopidogrel 75 mg/d, beta-blockers, angiotensin-convert-
ing enzyme inhibitors and statins. Information about previous PCI
procedure were available for us in the current admission thanks to
the print report of the PCI performed two years before, however, the
angiogram was not available. It was reported that a Driver stent
(Medtronic, Santa Clara, USA, 2.75 × 24 mm) was initially deployed
on the culprit lesion in the mid LCx at a level of a bend.
Subsequently, the PCI was complicated by stent loss. This was
apparently due to an attempt to deploy another Driver stent (2.5 ×
18 mm) distally in order to seal a dissection caused by balloon
dilatation of a lesion in the first obtuse marginal branch. While
advancing through the bend the stent was stripped from its balloon,
as described in the catheterization laboratory report of the other
hospital. The operators decided to crush it with a balloon (3.0 ×
20 mm Maverick NC, Boston Scientific Corporation, USA) at 18 atm.
Distal lesion was eventually sealed by prolonged balloon inflation
(2.5 × 20 mm Maverick NC, Boston Scientific Corporation, USA).
During the current admission, we performed coronary angiogra-
phy that showed a radio-opaque image at the site of previous
implanted stent in the mid-LCx, surrounded by a hazy image
suggestive of coronary thrombus. As no other coronary stenoses that
could explain the clinical presentation were found, we identified this
lesion as the culprit lesion for Non-ST Elevation acute coronary
syndrome (Fig. 1, panel A, B). A run of Frequency-Domain Optical
Coherence Tomography (FDOCT) was performed at the lesion site
using a non-occlusive technique with 20mm/sec pullback C7 XR
machine (Image wire and Image system, LightLab imaging Inc,
Westford, MA, USA), showing ST. Of importance, OCT showed a
crushed stent in the lumen with double layered struts of elliptical
shape (with 2.1 mm separating the two opposite strut layers that led
us to consider as a partial crushing), and with an image suggestive of
thrombus around the stent. Of note, the crushed stent showed an
area of malapposition, while the previous implanted BMS did not
show malapposition.
We decided to perform an infusion of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa
inhibitors (eptifibatide intravenous bolus 180 mcg/kg, followed by
continuous infusion 2.0 mcg/kg/min for 24hours) and to re-evaluate
Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine 13 (2012) 357–359
☆ Disclosures: The authors report no financial relationships or conflicts of interest
regarding the content herein.
⁎ Corresponding author. Tel.: +39 06 30154187; fax: +39 06 3055535.
E-mail address: gniccoli73@hotmail.it (G. Niccoli).
1553-8389/$ – see front matter © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carrev.2012.08.002
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