Easily removal of a malappositioned coronary stent with a guidewire
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VOLUME: 2 ISSUE: 2
P: 47 - 48
July 2015

Easily removal of a malappositioned coronary stent with a guidewire

Cardiovasc Surg Int 2015;2(2):47-48
1. Departments of Cardiovascular Surgery, Medical Faculty of Pamukkale University, Denizli, Turkey
2. Departments of Cardiology, Medical Faculty of Pamukkale University, Denizli, Turkey
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Introduction

Dislodgment of a stent during or after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is a rare complication with an incidence ranging from 0.32 to 8%.[1,2] The main risk factors for stent dislodgment include extreme coronary angulations and tortuosity, diffuse long lesions, and highly calcified coronary arteries.[1,2] Also, direct stent deployment and the inadequate predilatation or debulking of the lesion may cause stent distortion and underexpansion, increasing the risk of dislodgement.[1,2]

Stent migration may give rise to serious clinical consequences; it may be embolized in the coronary circulation and cause cerebral or peripheral embolization. Coronary embolization may lead to coronary thrombosis, myocardial infarction, emergency coronary artery bypass graft surgery, or even death.

Retrieval of a dislodged stent can be performed either percutaneously or surgically.[2,3]

With the advanced technology of today, stent dislodgement is less common. However, an ideal catheterization laboratory should be equipped with a set of instruments for intravascular foreign body retrieval and interventional cardiologists should be familiar with these retrieval techniques[2] in cooperation with the surgical team.

Case Presentation

A 69-year-old man was admitted to our hospital due to the chest pain and diagnosed with inferior myocardial infarction (MI). In his medical history, a 2.75x24 mm everolimus-eluting-stent was inserted to the right coronary artery (RCA) due to stable angina a week ago in another health care center.

He, then, urgently underwent a new coronary angiography. The RCA was fully occluded and previously deployed stent was malappositioned in the proximal portion (Figure ). During our attempt to cross the lesion, we detected that the tip of floppy guidewire (ChoICE™ Floppy - Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA) was coiled up and shrunk at the distal portion of the malappositioned stent. The malappositioned stent was easily coming out as we were cautiously pulling back the guidewire to push more distally the tip of guidewire.

Therefore, the dislocated stent was immediately removed and pulled back down. New introducer sheath was quickly placed in the other side. The RCA was passed with a new guidewire. A long dissection line was seen with spontaneous coronary flow (Figure ). After consecutive balloon predilatation with a 2.0x15 mm balloon, three everolimus-eluting-stents (2.75x24 mm, 3.0x24 mm, 3.0x28 mm, respectively) and finally one bare metal-stent (3.5x16 mm) were properly deployed.

Eventually, RCA was repaired and Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction-3 (TIMI-3) coronary flow was completely achieved (Figure ). Ultimately, the right femoral artery was surgically explored and the dislocated stent removed through arteriotomy, as the stent was not able to be retrieved back into the right femoral sheath completely (Figure 2).

Herein, we present an extremely rare case of PCIrelated complication due to a malappositioned stent, which was totally shrunk and easily removed from the coronary system.

Declaration of conflicting interests

The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to the authorship and/or publication of this article.

Funding

The authors received no financial support for the research and/or authorship of this article.

References

1
Porto I, Larosa C, Rosa I, Burzotta F, Trani C. Successful transradial removal of an inflated coronary stent dislodged from the right coronary ostium. Cardiovasc Revasc Med 2014;15:432-5.
2
Jang JH, Woo SI, Yang DH, Park SD, Kim DH, Shin SH. Successful coronary stent retrieval from the ascending aorta using a gooseneck snare kit. Korean J Intern Med 2013;28:481-5.
3
Kwan TW, Chaudhry M, Huang Y, Liou M, Wong S, Zhou X, et al. Approaches for dislodged stent retrieval during transradial percutaneous coronary interventions. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2013;81:245-9.