Coronary sinus diverticulum: importance, function, and treatment
- Iman Razeghian-Jahromi,
- Mohammad Nikoo,
- Andrea Natale
Abstract
The importance of venous structure in the heart is usually overshadowed
by that of the arterial system. Coronary sinus is a part of cardiac
venous apparatus and connects left atria to the right atria. Other than
having role in physiological contractions of both atria, it contributes
substantially to cardiac electrical conduction system. Due to unique
placement and connections of the CS, it has become growing interest in
clinical cardiology. It is used in cardiac resynchronization therapy
with biventricular pacing, left-sided catheter ablation of arrhythmias
and administration of retrograde cardioplegia in cardiac surgery. In
some individuals, CS is presented with anatomical variants. CS
diverticulum is a congenital outpouching that provides muscular
connection between atria and ventricle. This connection provides a
suitable substrate for occurrence of arrhythmias, which even results in
life-threatening events such as sudden cardiac death. Early diagnosis
leads to treatment with ablation techniques which ultimately eliminates
origins of arrhythmias.