Abstract:
Although well established for the treatment of intracranial and prostatic pathology, stereotactic radiosurgery has only recently emerged as a modality for the treatment of malignant lung lesions. Utilization of radio-opaque markers, called fiducials, facilitate dose-intensive radiation focused on the tumor with sparing of surrounding normal tissue. There is a paucity of literature regarding complications that occur secondary to placement of these fiducials. The following report details a case in which intracoronary migration resulted in a hemodynamically significant acute coronary syndrome.
Citation:
Farkas, E. A., Stoeckel, D. A., Nassif, A. S., Lim, M. J., & Naunheim, K. S. (2012). Intracoronary fiducial embolization after percutaneous placement for stereotactic radiosurgery. The Annals of thoracic surgery, 93(5), 1715-1717.