Hardware Failure as a Rare Complication of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: A Case Report

  • PapaRao Veera Venkata Ayyappa Krishna Sanka Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, G Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
  • Madhava Rao Bathala Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, G Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
  • Aayush Poddar Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, G Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
  • Karthik Ravindra Kumar Raman Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, G Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
  • Chakravarthi Paulraj Sudhakar Ignatius Department of Cardiology, G Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
  • Chandrasekar Padmanabhan Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, G Kuppuswamy Naidu Memorial Hospital, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
Keywords: Coronary artery disease; Percutaneous coronary intervention; Catheterization; Foreign bodies; Coronary artery bypass

Abstract

Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is increasingly employed in the treatment of complex coronary artery disease. The entrapment or fracture of a coronary angioplasty guidewire is a rare complication of PCI. We herein describe a 61-year-old man who presented with chronic stable angina. The patient’s coronary angiogram revealed triple-vessel coronary artery disease, and he was scheduled for primary PCI. During the procedure, the guidewire fractured within the right coronary artery. Despite multiple attempts, the wire could not be retrieved. The wire unraveled in its coils, and its stretching resulted in its eventual snapping in the right radial artery. The initial plan was to attempt guidewire retrieval through a brachial cut-down, and if successful, to manage the obtuse marginal lesion by PCI, thereby precluding general anesthesia and a sternotomy. Unfortunately, the guidewire snapped at the brachial level, necessitating its retrieval by coronary artery bypass surgery. The patient remained asymptomatic and event-free over 6 months of follow-up.

Published
2022-02-07
Section
Articles