Interactive Transcript
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In this case, I'm going to show you how
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to analyze an anomalous coronary artery.
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So this is an example of an anomalous coronary artery,
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but we're going to appreciate a few principles.
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First is where does the coronary artery arise?
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So here is the left main,
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and that gives off the LAD and
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circumflexus, a very short left main.
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And if you see this twig over here,
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that is the anomalous artery.
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So with anomalous arteries,
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there are two types of courses.
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One is the interarterial course, which is also
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called the malignant course, but there's no need
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to call it malignant, just call it interarterial.
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And the other is the retroaortic
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course, which is behind the aorta.
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So why is the interarterial course
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more dangerous?
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Because the artery is squashed between the
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aorta and the pulmonary artery of the right
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ventricular outflow tract, both of which
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can contract and push against the artery.
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Retroaortic course is between the aorta and
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the left atrium, and the left atrium is not
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really a structure that contracts very strongly.
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So there's more shear on the anomalous
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artery when it's between the aorta and the
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pulmonary artery, or some sort of force.
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But more than that, what's important as it
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is in this case, and I'm going to magnify
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this, is the angulation of the artery.
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So you can't even see where it comes off,
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but you know, it comes off somewhere here.
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So, if you imagine that, you know, you're traveling
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in a car, and this is a road, and somewhere here
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you need to enter the car, you have to swing at
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a very acute angle, almost a hairpin bend, and
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that hairpin bend is what makes this anatomy
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high risk for causing ischemia in its territory.
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It's not coming out nicely like the left main; see
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how nicely it comes off, you can map, or the LAD.
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It's coming off at an acute angle, and that's the
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most important thing, is the angulation of its origin.
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And as a result of its angulation, a
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portion of it travels in the wall of the
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aorta, so it has an intramural course.
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Coronary arteries generally do not travel in
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walls; they travel in the subepicardial space.
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They skirt walls, like this
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LAD is doing, but they don't.
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They have fat on both sides; they're
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very important arteries, they have an important job.
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And they are cushioned from
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the contraction of the wall.
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Here, you're not.
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Here, the RCA has that angulation as it comes off.
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Normally, the RCA comes off somewhere
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around the anterior position.
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Here it's coming off the left cusp.
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So this is a high-risk anatomy.
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The fact that the RCA is nicely pacified distally
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doesn't mean that it's not high risk.
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Meaning that distal pacification can still happen
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very nicely despite having proximal issues.
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Thank you.
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