Missed Coronary Artery Dissection Post-Blunt Chest Trauma

Cureus. 2023 Oct 25;15(10):e47630. doi: 10.7759/cureus.47630. eCollection 2023 Oct.

Abstract

Cardiac contusion is rarely diagnosed in patients with blunt chest trauma in the emergency department, especially if patients are asymptomatic. We present a case of a 43-year-old man whose diagnosis of left anterior descending artery (LAD) dissection after blunt chest trauma was delayed. The patient presented to the emergency department of a remote district hospital after a motorcycle accident, asymptomatic with a mildly reduced level of consciousness due to a very small subdural hemorrhage. Ten days later, when he developed a syncopal attack due to a massive pulmonary embolism (PE), his first performed electrocardiogram (ECG) showed sinus rhythm with QS waves and slight ST elevation in leads V2-V6. The subsequent coronary angiography showed left anterior descending artery dissection, and the diagnosis was nicely depicted with optical coherence tomography (OCT). A drug-eluting stent was implanted with a good angiographic result. This case highlights the significance of early recognition of traumatic coronary dissection, which should be excluded even in asymptomatic patients with a plain ECG acquisition, for the appropriate management and prevention of unfavorable outcomes.

Keywords: blunt trauma chest; coronary artery angiography; coronary artery dissection (cad); intravascular imaging; optical coherence tomography (oct).

Publication types

  • Case Reports