Case: An 8-year-old girl was incidentally detected to have a ventricular septal defect due to a continuous murmur with IV/VI intensity found on physical examination. Electrocardiography showed sinus rhythm and non-specific ST-T changes. Chest X-ray was suggestive of normal pulmonary blood flow with no cardiomegaly. Transthoracic echocardiography showed a red jet into the right ventricle with a defect in the inter-ventricular septum mimicking a muscular ventricular septal defect (Fig. 1a, b, supplementary video 1,2) with mildly dilated left ventricle. However, flow was continuous, noted in both diastole and systole (Fig. 1c). The gradient across the defect was 110/61mmHg (Fig. 1c). The parasternal long-axis view showed a grossly dilated left circumflex artery in the left atrioventricular groove with turbulent flow within (Fig. 1d). Aneurysmal left main origin continuing as a huge serpiginous left circumflex artery in the left atrioventricular groove draining into the right ventricle via inter-ventricular septum can be traced in an echocardiographic sweep (Fig. 2a–h, supplementary video 3). Cardiac contrast computed tomogram confirmed the same (Fig. 3a–e, Fig. 4a–d), and showed left anterior descending, right coronary and obtuse marginal arteries of normal calibre (Fig. 4a–d), and thus coronary cameral fistula involving left circumflex artery and draining to the right ventricle, mimicking a ventricular septal defect. Coronary cameral fistulas are rare cardiac malformations, seen only in 0.002% of the population. Reference Peighambari, Pakbaz, Alizadehasl, Hosseini and Pouraliakbar1 The presentation of coronary cameral fistulas varies from asymptomatic at an early age to symptomatic and starts complications upon ageing. Coronary cameral fistulas may be misdiagnosed as ventricular septal defect if the exit is into the right ventricle through the inter-ventricular septum. However, continuous Doppler flow through the defect, the presence of dilated coronaries and no colour jet truly crossing the inter-ventricular septum were suggestive of a coronary cameral fistula in our case. Multimodality imaging (coronary CT angiogram) has an immense role in confirming the diagnosis and in surgical/transcatheter planning in hemodynamically significant cases. Our case emphasises the routine segmental analysis by echocardiogram to avoid misdiagnosis and even to help us reach a rare diagnosis with certainty.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S104795112300389X.
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Obtained from the patient in line with COPE guidance.