| Literature DB >> 23151669 |
Ronak Delewi1, Felix Zijlstra, Jan J Piek.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23151669 PMCID: PMC3505867 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2012-301962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart ISSN: 1355-6037 Impact factor: 5.994
Figure 1The three components of the Virchow's triad in left ventricular thrombus formation. ACS, acute coronary syndrome; LV, left ventricular.
Sensitivities and specificities of different diagnostic modalities for the detection of left ventricular thrombus formation
| Sensitivity | Specificity | |
| TOE | 35% | 90% |
| Routine clinical TTE | 35–40% | 90% |
| TTE (indication suspect LV thrombus) | 60% | 90% |
| CT | Comparable with TTE | |
| Cine CMR | 60% | 90% |
| DE-CMR | 88% | 99% |
CMR, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging; CT, computed tomography; DE, delayed enhancement; LV, left ventricular; TOE, transoesophageal echocardiography; TTE, transthoracic echocardiography.
Figure 2Left ventricular (LV) thrombus formation on delayed gadolinium contrast cardiac MRI and transthoracic echocardiography. Transthoracic echocardiographic appearance of a thrombus (asterisk) in the apex of the left ventricle (A); cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance of the same patient also delineates the apical thrombus (B); late gadolinium enhancement imaging clearly confirms the avascular non-enhancing thrombus (asterisk, dark) close to the transmural infarcted myocardium (bright hyperenhanced, black arrowheads) with areas of microvascular obstruction (black, white arrowheads) (C). Courtesy of Dr A C van Rossum, Dr R Nijveldt, Department of Cardiology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and Dr B J Bouma, Department of Cardiology, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Figure 3Transthoracic echocardiographic appearance of a mobile, protruding left ventricular thrombus. Courtesy of J Vleugels and Rianne H A de Bruin, Department of Cardiology, Department of Cardiology, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.