| Literature DB >> 25161810 |
Tina H Leetmaa1, Bjarne L Nørgaard1, Henning Mølgaard1, Jesper M Jensen1.
Abstract
The present case shows that a normal brachial blood pressure (BP) does not exclude severe coarctation and should be considered in normotensive patients presenting with a systolic murmur and/or unexplained severe left ventricular hypertrophy. Congenital coarctation of the aorta is a narrowing of the descending aorta, usually located distal to the origin of the subclavian artery, causing hypertension in the upper part of the body. This condition may be undiagnosed until adult life where the clinical presentation most often is high BP in the upper extremities. A 57-year-old patient with severe aortic coarctation and left ventricular hypertrophy presented with normal brachial BP. However, standard suprasternal view by echocardiography indicated coarctation. Multislice computed tomographic (CT) angiography revealed an uncommon location of the aortic narrowing with the right and left subclavian arteries originating below the area of coarctation, explaining the equally low BP in both upper extremities.Entities:
Keywords: Aortic coarctation; left ventricular hypertrophy; multislice computed tomography; normal blood pressure
Year: 2014 PMID: 25161810 PMCID: PMC4142481 DOI: 10.4103/2156-7514.137835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Imaging Sci ISSN: 2156-5597
Figure 157-year-old male was referred to our outpatient clinic because the 12-lead ECG demonstrated left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy that was later diagnosed as due to congenital coarctation of the aorta. Transthoracic echocardiography (a) Apical four-chamber view and (b) M-mode show left ventricle hypertrophy (arrows); (c and d) suprasternal views show the narrowing in the thoracic descending aorta (arrow) and the continuous wave Doppler curve without diastolic run-off (arrow).
Figure 257-year-old male was referred to our outpatient clinic because the 12-lead ECG demonstrated left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy that was later diagnosed as due to congenital coarctation of the aorta. Multislice computed tomographic angiography and three-dimensional reconstruction show the aortic coarctation.