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Antidromic snare technique for re-implantation of a coronary sinus lead into the same cardiac vein after transvenous lead extraction: a case report.


ABSTRACT:

Background

After coronary sinus (CS) lead extraction in patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), occlusion of the branch vessel from which CS lead was extracted is a major obstacle to re-implantation, particularly if that vessel is the only optimal vessel for resynchronization.

Case summary

A 75-year-old female who underwent CRT implantation 11 years prior presented with worsening dyspnoea, right ventricle-only pacing rhythm, and increased CS lead pacing threshold. Because she was a CRT responder, we decided to replace the malfunctioning CS lead. After successful extraction, the vessel from which CS lead was extracted was not visualized, and guidewire re-insertion attempts failed. No other branch vessels suitable for re-implantation were observed. Fortunately, distal portion of the target vessel was viewed by a retrograde flow of contrast. A guidewire was advanced retrograde into the target vein via a connecting vessel, and the distal end of the guidewire was snared around CS ostium and then pulled out of the sheath. A new CS lead was inserted through the distal end of the guidewire and successfully implanted antegrade into the same target vein using a veno-venous loop of the guidewire ('anti-dromic snare technique'). The patient was discharged 2 days after the procedure without complications.

Discussion

Antegrade re-implantation of CS lead may not be possible after extracting CS leads with long dwell times, possibly due to extraction-induced vessel occlusion. If the occluded vessel is the only proper vessel for CS lead re-implantation, the anti-dromic snare technique could be a safe and effective bail-out strategy.

SUBMITTER: Kim J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10751563 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Antidromic snare technique for re-implantation of a coronary sinus lead into the same cardiac vein after transvenous lead extraction: a case report.

Kim Juwon J   Chung Tae-Wan TW   Park Seung-Jung SJ  

European heart journal. Case reports 20231212 1


<h4>Background</h4>After coronary sinus (CS) lead extraction in patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), occlusion of the branch vessel from which CS lead was extracted is a major obstacle to re-implantation, particularly if that vessel is the only optimal vessel for resynchronization.<h4>Case summary</h4>A 75-year-old female who underwent CRT implantation 11 years prior presented with worsening dyspnoea, right ventricle-only pacing rhythm, and increased CS lead pacing threshold. B  ...[more]

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