Review
Copyright ©2013 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Cardiol. Dec 26, 2013; 5(12): 484-494
Published online Dec 26, 2013. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v5.i12.484
Table 1 Fistula characteristics in congenital and acquired coronary cameral fistulas of 243 reviewed subjects
Congenital CCFs n =159 (65%)Acquired n = 84 (35%)
Solitary CCFs and coronary artery-ventricular multiple micro-fistulas[1]Traumatic CCFs n =72 (85.7%)Spontaneous n =12 (14.3%)
Sub-classificationSolitary 85%MMFs 15%Iatrogenic CCFs n =65/72 (90%)Accidental CCFs n =7/72 (10%)
AetiologyCongenital 65%Post-SMAfter other cardiac surgeryPost-EMBEP and PCIBlunt or sharp chest traumapost-MI or associated with severe coronary artery disease
Female percentage50%63%Unknown20%22%33%0%0%
Mean age46.2 (18-85)62.7 (39-85)45 (32-74)61 (40-78)50.8 (43-64)60.8 (46-75)24.1 (17-38)61 (29-75)
Prevalence/incidence135/159 (85%)24/159 (15%)20/65 (31%)5/65 (8%)25/65 (38%)15/65 (23%)10%14.30%
ManagementCMM 22%, SL 56%, PTE 22%CMM 100%, incidentally ICDCMM 11%, PTE 11%WW 40%, CMM 40%, PTE 20%CMM 73%CMMSurgical repair 100%CMM 17%,
SL 58%
Fistula characteristics
Origin
Proximal segment Any cardiac chambersMid- or distal segment LV > RVSeptal perforatorsLCA or RCARCA > LAD > CxLCARCA or LADRCA or LAD
TerminationAny cardiac chambers
LVRVAny cardiac chambersRV or LVRV or LV
Spontaneous resolutionOccasionallyNot reportedHigh rateNot reportedHigh rateOccasionallyNot reported8%