Coronary artery-bronchial artery fistulas: report of two Dutch cases with a review of the literature

Coronary bronchial artery fistulas (CBFs) are rare anomalies, which may be isolated or associated with other disorders. Two adult patients with CBFs are described and a PubMed search was performed using the keywords "coronary bronchial artery fistulas" in the period from 2008 to 2013. Twenty-seven reviewed subjects resulting in a total of 31 fistulas were collected. Asymptomatic presentation was reported in 5 subjects (19 %), chest pain (n = 17) was frequently present followed by haemoptysis (n = 7) and dyspnoea (n = 5). Concomitant disorders were bronchiectasis (44 %), diabetes (33 %) and hyp... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Said, S. A. M.
Oortman, R. M.
Hofstra, J. -H.
Verhorst, P. M. J.
Slart, R. H. J. A.
de Haan, M. W.
Eerens, F.
Crijns, H. J. G. M.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2014
Reihe/Periodikum: Said , S A M , Oortman , R M , Hofstra , J -H , Verhorst , P M J , Slart , R H J A , de Haan , M W , Eerens , F & Crijns , H J G M 2014 , ' Coronary artery-bronchial artery fistulas: report of two Dutch cases with a review of the literature ' , Netherlands Heart Journal , vol. 22 , no. 4 , pp. 139-147 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s12471-014-0518-z
Schlagwörter: Congenital anomaly / Coronary bronchial artery fistulas / Multi-detector computer tomography / Positron emission tomography/(13)-ammonia-adenosine scanning / Management
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29437036
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/publications/53c36cf4-e9df-41ff-9f75-9205169571e3

Coronary bronchial artery fistulas (CBFs) are rare anomalies, which may be isolated or associated with other disorders. Two adult patients with CBFs are described and a PubMed search was performed using the keywords "coronary bronchial artery fistulas" in the period from 2008 to 2013. Twenty-seven reviewed subjects resulting in a total of 31 fistulas were collected. Asymptomatic presentation was reported in 5 subjects (19 %), chest pain (n = 17) was frequently present followed by haemoptysis (n = 7) and dyspnoea (n = 5). Concomitant disorders were bronchiectasis (44 %), diabetes (33 %) and hypertension (28 %). Multimodality and single-modality diagnostic strategies were applied in 56 % and 44 %, respectively. The origin of the CBFs was the left circumflex artery in 61 %, the right coronary artery in 36 % and the left anterior descending artery in 3 %. Management was conservative (22 %), surgical ligation (11 %), percutaneous transcatheter embolisation (30 %), awaiting lung transplantation (7 %) or not reported (30 %). CBFs may remain clinically silent, or present with chest pain or haemoptysis. CBFs are commonly associated with bronchiectasis and usually require a multimodality approach to be diagnosed. Several treatment strategies are available. This report presents two adult cases with CBFs and a review of the literature.