
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Cardiac pseudotumors and other challenging diagnoses
- Section 2 Cardiac aneurysms and diverticula
- Section 3 Anatomic variants and congenital lesions
- Section 4 Coronary arteries
- Section 5 Pulmonary arteries
- Section 6 Cardiovascular MRI artifacts
- Section 7 Acute aorta and aortic aneurysms
- Case 54 Pitfalls in arterial enhancement timing
- Case 55 Misdiagnosis of acute aortic syndrome in the ascending aorta due to cardiac motion
- Case 56 Aortic pseudodissection from penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer
- Case 57 Ductus diverticulum mimicking ductus arteriosus aneurysm
- Case 58 Pericardial recess mimicking traumatic aortic injury
- Case 59 Neointimal calcifications mimicking displaced intimal calcifications on unenhanced CT
- Case 60 The value of non-contrast CT in vascular imaging
- Case 61 Shearing of branch arteries in intramural hematoma: a mimic of active extravasation
- Case 62 Imaging features of aortic aneurysm instability
- Case 63 Aortoenteric fistula
- Case 64 Infammatory aortic aneurysm
- Case 65 Incorrect aneurysm measurement due to aortic tortuosity
- Section 8 Post-operative aorta
- Section 9 Mesenteric vascular
- Section 10 Peripheral vascular
- Section 11 Veins
- Index
- References
Case 59 - Neointimal calcifications mimicking displaced intimal calcifications on unenhanced CT
from Section 7 - Acute aorta and aortic aneurysms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Cardiac pseudotumors and other challenging diagnoses
- Section 2 Cardiac aneurysms and diverticula
- Section 3 Anatomic variants and congenital lesions
- Section 4 Coronary arteries
- Section 5 Pulmonary arteries
- Section 6 Cardiovascular MRI artifacts
- Section 7 Acute aorta and aortic aneurysms
- Case 54 Pitfalls in arterial enhancement timing
- Case 55 Misdiagnosis of acute aortic syndrome in the ascending aorta due to cardiac motion
- Case 56 Aortic pseudodissection from penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer
- Case 57 Ductus diverticulum mimicking ductus arteriosus aneurysm
- Case 58 Pericardial recess mimicking traumatic aortic injury
- Case 59 Neointimal calcifications mimicking displaced intimal calcifications on unenhanced CT
- Case 60 The value of non-contrast CT in vascular imaging
- Case 61 Shearing of branch arteries in intramural hematoma: a mimic of active extravasation
- Case 62 Imaging features of aortic aneurysm instability
- Case 63 Aortoenteric fistula
- Case 64 Infammatory aortic aneurysm
- Case 65 Incorrect aneurysm measurement due to aortic tortuosity
- Section 8 Post-operative aorta
- Section 9 Mesenteric vascular
- Section 10 Peripheral vascular
- Section 11 Veins
- Index
- References
Summary
Imaging description
The aortic wall comprises three layers: intima, media, and adventitia. The wall is imperceptible and inferred on contrast-enhanced CT by a boundary separating two tissues of contrasting attenuations: arterial lumen and the periarterial soft tissue. Processes such as intramural hematoma (IMH) that thicken the media expand the wall and displace the intimal layer inwards toward the lumen.
Aortic calcifications are usually centered on the intima and are, therefore, peripherally located (Figure 59.1). A process in the media that displaces the intima renders the calcifications non-peripheral (Figures 59.2A and 59.3).
However, non-peripheral calcifications can also be dystrophic calcifications of the mural thrombus, also known as neointimal calcifications (Figures 59.2B, 59.4, and 59.5).
How can the distinction be made on unenhanced CT?
Neointimal calcifications are chunky and random, since any part of the thrombus can calcify (Figure 59.2B). Intimal calcifications are thin, linear, and circumferentially configured (Figure 59.2A).
Neointimal calcifications may co-exist with intimal calcifications, in which case there are calcifications peripheral to neointimal calcifications (Figure 59.4).
Mural thrombus is of a lower attenuation (< 30 HU) than acute intramural hematoma (50–80 HU) and blood pool (40–50 HU).
Importance
Distinguishing between neointimal calcifications and displaced intimal calcifications is important because the latter reflects acute aortic pathology such as IMH and dissection. Dystrophic calcifications of the mural thrombus reflect an indolent process. The pitfall can result in incorrect diagnosis of acute aortic syndrome.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Pearls and Pitfalls in Cardiovascular ImagingPseudolesions, Artifacts, and Other Difficult Diagnoses, pp. 189 - 192Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015