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Incidentally Diagnosed Double Inferior Vena Cava While Being Investigated for Pulmonary Hypertension

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A 57-year-old male was admitted with exertional dyspnea. Transesophageal echocardiography revealed a large sinus venosus-type atrial septal defect (ASD). During right heart catheterization, we encountered difficulty when we directed the… Click to show full abstract

A 57-year-old male was admitted with exertional dyspnea. Transesophageal echocardiography revealed a large sinus venosus-type atrial septal defect (ASD). During right heart catheterization, we encountered difficulty when we directed the catheter into the superior vena cava (SVC). We tried to figure out what the problem was by pulling back the catheter and giving it a little amount of opaque. We observed that there was a duplication of the inferior vena cava (DIVC) (Video 1). An abdominal computed tomography scan showed DIVC below the renal veins. Both inferior vena cava (IVC) were formed from the respective common iliac veins and ran upwards bilaterally to the renal veins. The hepatic veins drained into a stump of the hepatic segment of the IVC, which opened cranially into the right atrium and caudally drained into the right renal vein, at the confluence with the right IVC. The left IVC once receiving the left renal vein crossed posterior to the aorta to join the right IVC and continued cephalad as the azygos vein, and the azygos vein finally drained into the normal right superior vena cava and the right atrium (Figure 1A-1D, Videos 2, 3).

Keywords: inferior vena; cava; vena cava; ivc; incidentally diagnosed

Journal Title: Anatolian Journal of Cardiology
Year Published: 2022

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