Literature DB >> 17715106

Indeterminate CT angiography in blunt thoracic trauma: is CT angiography enough?

Marla Sammer1, Eric Wang, C Craig Blackmore, Thomas R Burdick, William Hollingworth.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The primary objective of our study was to determine whether catheter angiography is needed to exclude aortic and intrathoracic great vessel injury when CT angiography (CTA) findings are indeterminate (mediastinal hematoma without direct evidence of aortic or intrathoracic great vessel injury). The secondary objective was to devise a classification scheme for mediastinal hematomas.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study is a retrospective analysis of patients presenting with blunt trauma over 4.5 years at a level 1 trauma center. Indeterminate CTA findings in patients with blunt injury were identified through a database search of imaging reports. CTA findings and final outcomes, including catheter angiography and clinicopathologic records, were reviewed independently by blinded observers.
RESULTS: One hundred seven patients (age range, 11-88 years) met the inclusion criteria. Seventy-two (age range, 15-88 years) had a reference standard of subsequent catheter angiography, and 35 subjects (age range, 11-87 years) did not undergo catheter angiography and therefore had a reference standard of clinicopathologic review. No subjects with isolated mediastinal hematoma on CTA had aortic or intrathoracic great vessel injury, for a positive predictive value of 0% (95% CI, 0-0.028). Using our proposed classification scheme, we found a direct correlation between the percentage of cases that underwent catheter angiography and hematoma severity.
CONCLUSION: When CTA is indeterminate in blunt thoracic trauma, conventional angiography is unlikely to show an aortic or intrathoracic great vessel injury and may be unnecessary. A grading system for mediastinal hematomas could help triage patients to conventional angiography when further imaging is desired.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17715106     DOI: 10.2214/AJR.07.2432

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol        ISSN: 0361-803X            Impact factor:   3.959


  6 in total

Review 1.  Imaging of thoracic aortic disease.

Authors:  B J Holloway; D Rosewarne; R G Jones
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 3.039

Review 2.  [Imaging of trauma with multi-detector computed tomography].

Authors:  M Körner; M Reiser; U Linsenmaier
Journal:  Radiologe       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 0.635

3.  Minimal aortic injury of the thoracic aorta: imaging appearances and outcome.

Authors:  Martin L D Gunn; Bruce E Lehnert; Rachel S Lungren; Chitti Babu Narparla; Lee Mitsumori; Joel A Gross; Benjamin Starnes
Journal:  Emerg Radiol       Date:  2014-01-11

4.  ACR Appropriateness Criteria(®) blunt chest trauma--suspected aortic injury.

Authors:  Shadpour Demehri; Frank J Rybicki; Benoit Desjardins; Chieh-Min Fan; Scott D Flamm; Christopher J Francois; Marie D Gerhard-Herman; Sanjeeva P Kalva; Hyun S Kim; M Ashraf Mansour; Emile R Mohler; Isabel B Oliva; Matthew P Schenker; Clifford Weiss; Karin E Dill
Journal:  Emerg Radiol       Date:  2012-03-18

5.  Conventional surgical repair of traumatic rupture of the thoracic aorta.

Authors:  Kiyoshi Chiba; Hiroyuki Abe; Yosuke Kitanaka; Takeshi Miyairi; Haruo Makuuchi
Journal:  Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2014-06-06

Review 6.  Blunt cardiac trauma: a narrative review.

Authors:  Ryaan El-Andari; Devin O'Brien; Sabin J Bozso; Jeevan Nagendran
Journal:  Mediastinum       Date:  2021-09-25
  6 in total

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