• Cardiac CT in the Diagnosis and Management of Coronary Artery Fistulae

    by Mohamed Saber, Milos Prica, Reza Ashrafi, Damien Cullington, Ahmed Kharabish,  and Sarah Moharem-Elgamal 

    Abstract

    Coronary artery fistulae (CAF) are uncommon congenital or acquired coronary anomalies. A CAF occurs when a coronary artery bypasses the myocardial capillary bed to directly communicate with a cardiac chamber, a great vessel, or another vascular structure. Many CAFs are found by chance. If haemodynamically significant, a CAF may cause a variety of phenomena e.g., myocardial ischaemia, arrhythmias, heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, infective endocarditis/endarteritis, aneurysm formation, and late thrombotic complication. Management is anatomy-driven and dependent on the precise definition of the CAF�s origin, course, termination, multiplicity, associated coronary remodeling, and complications, together with an assessment of physiological relevance. Invasive coronary angiography is indispensable for real-time haemodynamics and transcatheter therapy, yet the two-dimensional projection nature can incompletely characterize complex CAF anatomy. Gated computed tomography coronary angiography (CTCA) produces high-resolution volumetric imaging with robust three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction and is central to contemporary diagnosis, quantitative risk stratification, procedural planning, and follow-up. This review examines the role of CTCA for the diagnosis and management of CAF and aims to provide a comprehensive overview for physicians managing this esoteric group of patients.