Diagnostic Radiology/Chest Imaging/Thoracic Great Vessels
Appearance
- State the normal dimensions of the thoracic aorta
- Describe the classifications of aortic dissection (DeBakey I,II, III; Stanford A, B), and implications for classification on medical versus surgical management
- State and recognize the findings of, and distinguish between each of the following on CT and MR:
- aortic aneurysm
- aortic dissection
- aortic intramural hematoma
- penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer
- ulcerated plaque
- sinus of valsalva aneurysm
- subclavian or brachiocephalic artery aneurysm
- aortic coarctation
- aortic pseudocoarctation
- Recognize a right aortic arch and a double aortic arch on a radiograph, chest CT and chest MR
- State the significance of a right aortic arch with mirror image branching versus with an aberrant subclavian artery
- Recognize a cervical aortic arch on a radiograph and chest CT
- Recognize an aberrant subclavian artery on chest CT
- Recognize normal variants of aortic arch branching, including common origin of brachiocephalic and left common carotid arteries ("bovine arch"), separate origin of vertebral artery from arch
- Define the terms aneurysm and pseudoaneurysm
- State the common cardiac anomalies associated with aortic coarctation
- State and identify the findings seen in Takayasu's arteritis on chest CT and chest MR
- State the advantages and disadvantages of CT, MRI/MRA and transesophageal echocardiography in the evaluation of the thoracic aorta