Drug-eluting stents are widely used to prevent restenosis in de novo lesions, and for percutaneous treatment of in-stent restenosis. However, their long-term safety profile is still debatable. A 46-year-old female patient was admitted with acute inferoposterior myocardial infarction due to late stent thrombosis that developed after 168 days of implantation of two sirolimus-eluting stents for a restenotic bare metal stent to the right coronary artery. She had been receiving aspirin and clopidogrel, both of which were discontinued for five days for the preparation of a noncardiac operation. Tissue plasminogen activator with heparin and tirofiban was started immediately, which resulted in ST-segment resolution within 30 minutes. Coronary angiography after the completion of t-PA infusion showed TIMI III flow in the right coronary artery. The stents were fully patent and all the thrombus was lysed. Antiaggregant therapy with aspirin and clopidogrel was resumed. Long-term may imply life-time treatment with antiplatelet agents.
Keywords: Coronary angiography, coronary stenosis, coronary thrombosis/etiology, myocardial infarction/etiology; platelet aggregation inhibitors; stents/adverse effectsCopyright © 2024 Archives of the Turkish Society of Cardiology