Cardiac tamponade due to right coronary artery perforation following pacemaker implantation: a case report

Zakaria Alaoui-Ismaili*, Anika Klein, Jacob Eifer Moeller, Tommi Bo Lindhardt, Christian Hassager

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Background Cardiac tamponade due to perforation of a cardiac chamber is a rare complication occurring in only 0.3% of patients undergoing permanent pacemaker (PM) implantation. Notably, perforation of the right coronary artery (RCA) following permanent PM implantation has only been reported twice in the literature. We report a rare case of RCA perforation leading to life-threatening cardiac tamponade with symptom onset 4 days after PM implantation Case summary A 75-year-old woman underwent permanent PM implantation without any difficulties in placing pacemaker leads and with good thresholds. Four days later, the patient was readmitted in a state of shock due to cardiac tamponade. A blood gas analysis on the bloody pericardial effusion raised suspicion of ongoing arterial bleeding. A CT scan ruled out aortic dissection; instead, the source of bleeding was identified as a perforation in the RCA, which was managed surgically. Discussion This case highlights the necessity of coronary artery perforation being among the differential diagnoses of cardiac tamponade after PM implantation, and it stresses the usefulness of performing a blood gas analysis on the bloody pericardial effusion.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberytae343
JournalEuropean Heart Journal - Case Reports
Volume8
Issue number7
Number of pages6
ISSN2514-2119
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1. Jul 2024

Keywords

  • Active-fixation (screw-in) lead
  • Cardiac tamponade
  • Case report
  • Pacemaker implantation
  • Right coronary artery perforation

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