An unruptured, thrombosed 10 cm right coronary artery aneurysm mimicking a pericardial cyst

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Abstract

Giant coronary artery aneurysms are a rare and potentially life-threatening condition. A 47 year old male presented with a progressive 6 month history of dyspnea and acute right sided chest pain. During the patients work-up, a 10 cm × 10 cm right coronary artery aneurysm was discovered on CT scan and confirmed by cardiac catheterization. The patient was emergently taken to the operating room for aneurysmal resection with placement of a greater saphenous vein bypass graft. There were no post-operative complications and the etiology of this patient's aneurysm was determined to be a congenital ectatic dilation of his right coronary artery. The patient is doing well at 2 years of clinical follow-up. © 2013 Chauhan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Chauhan, A., Musunuru, H., Hallett, R. L., Walsh, M., Szabo, S., & Halloran, W. (2013). An unruptured, thrombosed 10 cm right coronary artery aneurysm mimicking a pericardial cyst. Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1749-8090-8-2

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