| Literature DB >> 26798385 |
Jun Sung Kim1, Kay-Hyun Park1, Cheong Lim1, Dong Jin Kim1, Yochun Jung2, Yoon Cheol Shin1, Sang Il Choi3, Eun Ju Chun3, Jin Young Yoo3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Preoperative identification of intimal tear site in acute type A dissection will help procedural planning. The objective of this study was to determine the key findings of computed tomography (CT)-based prediction for tear site and compare the accuracy between radiologists and surgeons. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Multi-detector CT (MDCT) images from 50 patients who underwent surgical repair of type A aortic dissection were retrospectively reviewed by 4 cardiac surgeons with limited experience or by 3 radiologists specialized in cardiovascular imaging. Surgical findings of intimal tear site were used as references.Entities:
Keywords: Aorta; Aortic dissection; Computerized tomography
Year: 2016 PMID: 26798385 PMCID: PMC4720849 DOI: 10.4070/kcj.2016.46.1.48
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean Circ J ISSN: 1738-5520 Impact factor: 3.243
Clinical profiles of register
| Total (N=50) | |
|---|---|
| Preoperative | |
| Male | 25 (50) |
| Age (years) | 54.8±14.4 |
| Marfan | 8 (16) |
| Shock status | 6 (12) |
| Malperfusion | 17 (34) |
| Operative procedure | |
| Ascending aorta replacement | 20 (40) |
| Hemiarch or partial arch replacement | 19 (38) |
| Total arch replacement | 11 (22) |
| Combined procedure | |
| +Aortic valve procedure | 13 (26) |
| +CABG | 4 (8) |
| Operative outcomes | |
| Mortality | 5 (10) |
| Bleeding reoperation | 4 (8) |
| Permanent neurologic deficit | 3 (6) |
| Acute renal failure | 2 (4) |
Data are expressed as mean±standard deviation or n (%). CABG: coronary artery bypass grafting
Fig. 1The aorta is divided into four segments to categorize the predicted site of intimal tear according to the probability of need for arch replacement. 1; ascending aorta, 2; inferior arch, 3; superior arch, 4; beyond arch/descending thoracic aorta.
Accuracy of predicting intimal tear site with computed tomography findings
| Reviewer | Specialty and experience | Overall accuracy (%) | Tear in the ascending aorta | Tear in the arch | Tear only in descending aorta (retrograde dissection) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | Sensitivity | Specificity | Sensitivity | Specificity | |||
| No. 1 | CV radiologist for 11 years | 86 | 96.9 | 72.2 | 81.1 | 100 | 42.9 | 100 |
| No. 2 | CV radiologist for 8 years | 86 | 87.5 | 88.9 | 66.7 | 90.6 | 71.4 | 100 |
| No. 3 | CV radiologist for 2 years | 88 | 100 | 77.8 | 50 | 100 | 71.4 | 100 |
| No. 4 | Operating surgeon<30 cases | 76 | 71.9 | 100 | 66.7 | 93.8 | 100 | 83.7 |
| No. 5 | Assisting surgeon<20 cases | 78 | 84.4 | 88.9 | 72.2 | 90.6 | 85.7 | 97.7 |
| No. 6 | Assisting surgeon<20 cases | 82 | 96.9 | 83.3 | 50 | 100 | 85.7 | 95.3 |
| No. 7 | Assisting surgeon<10 cases | 64 | 78.1 | 72.2 | 50 | 84.4 | 42.9 | 97.7 |
| No. 1-3 | Radiologists | 86.7±1.2 | 94.8±6.5 | 79.6±8.5 | 65.9±15.6 | 96.9±5.4 | 61.9±16.5 | 100±0 |
| No. 4-7 | Surgeons | 75.0±7.7 | 82.8±10.7 | 86.1±11.6 | 59.7±11.5 | 92.2±6.5 | 78.6±24.7 | 93.6±6.7 |
| No. 1-7 | All | 80.0±8.3 | 88.0±10.6 | 83.3±10.2 | 62.4±12.5 | 94.2±6.1 | 71.4±21.8 | 96.3±5.8 |
Data are expressed as % or mean±standard deviation. CV: cardiovascular
Fig. 2Distinct intimal flap defect found in the ascending aorta (A), the anterosuperior arch (B), and origin of aberrant right subclavian artery (C and D). Unusual findings in the transverse sections (E and F) turned out to be complete transection and distal invagination of the intimal flap in the sagittal section (G). All reviewers accurately pointed out those findings.
Fig. 3Tiny flap defect is barely identifiable in the axial section (A and B), but only in the sagittal section (arrow in C and D). While the radiologists were all accurate, some surgeons missed such findings. Thrombosis of false lumen in the proximal ascending aorta is present on C and D.
Factors associated with intimal tear location
| Variables | Intimal tear in the ascending aorta | Intimal tear in the arch | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | |
| Age | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Gender | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Marfan syndrome | p=0.039 | NS | NS | NS |
| Dissection flap in any of the arch branches | p=0.092 | NS | NS | NS |
| Dissection flap in all arch branches | p=0.018 | NS | NS | NS |
| Ascending aorta maximal diameter >50 mm | p=0.108 | NS | NS | NS |
| FL thrombosis in the proximal ascending aorta | p<0.001 | OR 0.052 | NS | NS |
| Pericardial effusion | NS | NS | NS | NS |
NS: not significant, FL: false lumen; OR: odds ratio, CI: confidence interval
Fig. 4One of two flap discontinuities shown in the sagittal section is concordant with the real intimal tear (arrows in A and C). The other one (arrowheads in B and C) is caused by folding of the intimal flap, leading to false positive diagnosis by five of the seven reviewers, including one radiologist.
Fig. 5The cases of retrograde dissection from descending aortic tear for which all radiologists were inaccurate. The point of abrupt change in false lumen patency (A-C, arrow) or point of suspicious contrast leakage (D and E, arrow) turned out to be free from intimal tear.