Paediatric cardiothoracic CTA Indications, Technique And Relevant Anatomy Gerhard van der Westhuizen...
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Transcript of Paediatric cardiothoracic CTA Indications, Technique And Relevant Anatomy Gerhard van der Westhuizen...
![Page 1: Paediatric cardiothoracic CTA Indications, Technique And Relevant Anatomy Gerhard van der Westhuizen Medical officer, Radiology 3 Military hospital 12.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022070407/56649e185503460f94b041cf/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Paediatric cardiothoracic CTA
Indications,TechniqueAnd Relevant Anatomy Gerhard van der Westhuizen
Medical officer, Radiology3 Military hospital
12 October 2012
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Introduction• MDCT has revolutionised angiographic evaluation of the
heart and thoracic vessels.▫ Faster scan times▫ Increased anatomical coverage▫ High quality reconstructions
• Previous scanning issues in children included:
▫ Breath-holding ability (motion artifacts)▫ Slow scan times causing difficulties in administation of contrast
Small gauge IV catheters Difficult sites Manual administration Short distances between central line and heart.
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Comparison of thoracic imaging techniques•Echocadiography
▫ CTA more global assessment of cardiovascular structures (pulmonary arteries, anterior mediastinum, thoracic aorta etc).
▫ CTA also includes airway and lung parenchyma.▫ Sedation needed with echocardiography, not always
needed with CTA.▫ CTA is quicker, less operator dependent.▫ Costs the same.▫ CTA limited functional information, less portable,
poorer temporal resolution and RADIATION .▫ IV access not required with echo.
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Comparison of thoracic imaging techniques•MR angiography
▫ Less need for sedation with CTA.▫ CTA is quicker.▫ Thermal stability (esp. Neonates – out of
incubator).▫ CTA can be performed immediately post-op, no
metal issues. ▫ No radiation with MRI.
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Comparison of thoracic imaging techniques•Heart catheterisation
▫ Better physiologic and functional information.▫ Only intracardiac and intravacular anatomical
detail.▫ Biplane compared to 3D options with CTA.▫ Radiation dose usually higher with catheterisation.▫ Sedation needed.▫ More expensive than CTA.▫ Technically more difficult.
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Dose comparison•Study compared conventional chest CT, CTA,
Gated CTA and conventional angiography:(Frush, Yoshizumi; 2006)
•Average dose in children:▫Conventional chest CT 1.0 to 4.0 mSv▫CTA 1.0 to 4.0 mSv▫Gated CTA 7.0 to 25 mSv▫Conventional angiography 5.0 to 20 mSv
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Indications• Detection of disease or pathology
▫ i.e. Diagnosis• Improve clinical decision making
▫ Need for other diagnostic testing▫ Use of specific intervention
• No role in defining normal anatomy• No role in assessing function• Not a screening tool• Specific disease states
▫ Extracardiac great vessel anomalies▫ Intracardiac shunt lesions▫ Post-operative anatomy▫ Most often used for congenital heart lesions▫ Trauma
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CTA technique
•Preperation▫Ask clinician to list specific questions to
adress ? Vascular anomalies ? Major airways, lung aeration ? Mediastinal abnormalities – Collections,
infection etc. ? Status of upper abdomen – situs
abnormalities/ abscence of spleen Less frequent ‘protocol’ scanning than in
adults
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CTA technique
•Example: Scan onset differs for conditions like caval-to-pulmonary artery connection compared to systemic arterial-to-pulmonary artery connection.
•Artifacts: Coils, stents, clips, valves, septal occluders, pacing wires etc. Know about them before the scan!
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CTA technique
•Preperation▫Sedation
Mostly needed for 1-2 year age group Can be performed by other health care
providers If child is intubated – as quickly as possible
during inspiration Quiet breathing also acceptable
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CTA technique
•IV access – Type▫20 or 22 gauge peripheral ▫24 gauge can also provide adequate
information▫Long extension tubing – small contrast
volume may remain in ‘dead space’ if not flushed.
▫Contrast volume may be less than 5 ml and 1-2 ml in ‘dead space’ is significant.
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CTA technique
•IV access – Location▫Distance from heart – peripheral line in
infant same distance as central line in adults.
▫Anterior mediastinum – use right arm or lower extremity (less streak artifact from left brachiocephalic vein).
▫Difference in evaluating IVC inflow for Fontan procedure (use lower limb or delayed scan) to evaluating pulmonary stenosis.
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CTA tecnique
•Avoid artifacts▫Remove leads and wires from chest surface▫Careful not to have watches/jewelry in
gantry when injecting manually.
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CTA technique
•IV contrast▫Type▫Volume▫Rate▫Route▫Method▫Onset of scanning
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CTA technique• Type
▫Low or isosmolar▫300mg I/ml concentration▫370mg I/ml if total volume is an issue (rarely)
• Volume▫MDCT lower dose▫1.5ml/kg▫Max of 3 ml/kg▫ (Cardiac catheterisation uses 5-6ml/kg)▫These doses are beneficial if repeat scanning is
needed
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CTA technique
•Rate
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CTA technique• Route
▫ Peripheral or central With central – opacification of pulmonary arteries almost
instantaneous. NB to know where tip of catheter is. Hardware delays may lead to missing peak opacification with small
contrast volumes.
• Method▫ Contrast pump whenever possible
Not with 24-G, positional lines, poor backflow or lines on distal forearm, hands or feet.
▫ Manual Unpredictable enhancement, average rate of 1.5 ml/sec Extravation detectors not used due to low amount of contrast used.
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CTA technique•Onset of scanning
▫MDCT has obviated much of the calculation required
▫Possible to scan too early or too late Too early – Rapid scanning time Too late – Small volume of contrast, high cardiac
output (shot period of optimal enhancement)
▫Three techniques: 1. Empiric delay 2. Bolus tracking 3. Test bolus
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CTA technique• 1. Empiric delay
▫ Paeds: 10-20 sec▫ Neonates: 4-10 sec
• 2. Bolus tracking▫ “Smartprep”▫ Serial enhancement at a preselected level▫ 10 mA (minimum tube mA)▫ At level of vessel/structure most critical for evaluation▫ Mostly at mid-ventricular level▫ Difference of 5-7 sec between actual enhancement and when
scanning begins (software and hardware delays)▫ Counteract this by:
Monitor interval of 1.0 sec Inject only after first monitoring image shows
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CTA technique
•2. Bolus tracking (cont.)▫Steps:
1. Start bolus tracking display of monitoring images
2. Start contrast injection after 1st monitoring image appears
3. Start diagnostic scanning when opacification of desired structures begins or just prior to (more guesswork required)
4. Stop contrast injection if scanning is complete before entire volume is given
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CTA technique•3. Test bolus
▫Small volume (0.5 – 1.0ml) given▫Time from injection to opacification of desired
structure then use with diagnostic scan with full contrast bolus.
•Onset of scanning is a critical step in CTA!▫With evaluation of pulmonary arteries start
scanning when right ventricle starts opacifying.▫Start scanning when left ventricle starts
opacifying for evaluation of aorta.
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CTA technique• Scan parameters:
▫ Scan FOV Use large FOV if child may move
▫ Number of detector rows Use highest available - 64
▫ Detector thickness Thinnest width – 0.625mm NB for multiplanar recons and 3D volume rendering
▫ Tube current According to patient’s size
▫ kVp Reduced for small children (80kVp under 2 years, 100 kVp up to 6 years)
▫ Scan thickness Include all structures of interest
▫ Reconstruction algorithms Volume rendering and MIP projections usually sufficient when necessary
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Parameters
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Coronary artery CT angiography
• For adequate visualisation: Use isotropic in-plane and through-plane spatial resolutions <1mm(Equal voxel dimensions in x, y and z axes)
• Submillimeter collimation• Pitch <1 (0.2 to 0.3)• Higher milliamperage and kVp necessary to counter
increased noise.• Bolus tracking/ test bolus used.• ECG gating necessary for motionless images.• Usually retrospective ECG gating – use diastole.• Increased exposure!• Online dose modulation programs – high mA only during
diastole.
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Coronary artery CTA
Left
Right
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Normal anatomy
•Thoracic aorta•Pulmonary arteries•Pulmonary veins•Superior vena cava•Azygous system
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Thoracic aorta• Five segments:
▫ Aortic root From base of heart Includes aortic valve Annulus Sinus of Valsalva
▫ Ascending aorta From aortic root to right innominate artery
▫ Proximal aortic arch Right innominate artery to left subclavian artery
▫ Distal aortic arch/isthmus Left subclavian artery to ligamentum arteriosum
▫ Descending aorta Level of ligamentum arteriosum to hiatus in diaphragm
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Thoracic aorta
•Normal branching pattern:▫Brachiocephalic trunk–R subclavian artery,
R CCA ▫Left CCA ▫L subclavian artery
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Pulmonary arteries• Main pulmonary artery/pulmonary trunk lies within
the pericardium• Devides into larger right and smaller left pulmonary
arteries• Right passes posterior to AA, SVC, R upper lobe
pulmonary vein• Then devides into 2 branches – upper lobe branch
and interlobar artery supplies middle and lower lobe• The left is shorter and smaller• Courses anterior to the descending aorta and left
main bronchus and divides into upper and lower lobe branches.
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Pulmonary arteries
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Pulmonary veins
•Typically 4 pulmonary veins:
▫Right and left superior and inferior R superior – Blood from R upper and middle
lobes R inferior – Blood from R lower lobe L superior – Blood from L upper lobe +
lingula L inferior – Blood from L lower lobe
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Pulmonary veins
•Variations:▫Conjoined – Sup and inf open into L
atrium via common ostium. More common on the left.
▫Accessory – Extra veins seperate from pulm veins. Occurs more commonly on the right.
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Pulmonary veins
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SVC and azygous system•SVC formed by L and R brachiocephalic veins•Blood from upper extremities, head and neck.•Drains into R atrium•Azygous vein formed by ascending lumbar and
right subcostal veins.•Blood from posterior chest and abdominal walls•Arches over right hilum and drains into
posterior part of SVC.•Hemiazygous and accessory hemiazygous veins
drain from the left into the azygous vein.
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Azygous system
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Normal anatomy of the heart•Cardiac chambers
▫Right atrium Larger posterior atrium proper and smaller anterior
atrial appendage. Devided by crista terminalis. Receives SVC and IVC.
▫Left atrium Forms base of the heart. Valveless R and L pulmonary veins drain into L atrium Left auricle forms superior part of left border of
heart.
Seperated by interatrial septum containing fossa ovale
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Normal anatomy of the heart
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Normal anatomy of the heart• Cardiac chambers
▫Right ventricle Forms largest part of anterior surface of the heart Contains coarse trabeculae and tapers into conus
arteriosus which leads to pulmonary trunk. Contains commonly identified muscle band- Moderator
band▫Left ventricle
Forms apex of the heart and left border. Fine trabeculae, walls 3 x thicker than right. Two prominent papillary muscles
Seperated by interventricular septum – membranous and muscular parts.
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Normal anatomy of the heart
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Normal anatomy of the heart
•Cardiac valves▫Aortic valve: Right, left and non-coronary
cusps
▫Pulmonary valve: Anterior, right and left cusps
▫Mitral: Aortic (anterior) and mural (posterior) leaflets
▫Tricuspid: Septal, anterior and posterior leaflets
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Normal anatomy of the heart
•Cardiac valves
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Normal anatomy of the heart•Coronary arteries
▫Left coronary artery From left coronary sinus Bifurcates into LAD ad left circumflex branches LAD gives rise to diagonal branches. Circumflex gives rise to left marginal artery.
▫Right coronary artery From right coronary sinus Branches include: Sinuatrial nodal, AV nodal, right
marginal and most commonly posterior IV branch.
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Normal anatomy of the heart
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Normal anatomy of the heart
•Cardiac veins▫Great cardiac vein accompanies LAD▫Middle cardiac vein accompanies
posterior IV branch▫Small cardiac vein accompanies right
marginal branch of RCA.▫All larger branches drains into coronary
sinus and into right atrium▫Small anterior cardiac veins drain
directly into right atrium
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Thoracic vascular anomalies
•Aortic anomalies:▫0.5 to 3% of population▫Five groups:
Left aortic arch Right aortic arch Double aortic arch Cervical arch Innominate artery
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Left arch with abberant right subclavian artery• R subclavian artery is seen on CT as last of major
arterires from aortic arch.• Most common anomaly of aortic arch• 0.5 to 2% of population
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Right aortic arch with aberrant left subclavian artery
(Posterior view)
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Double aortic arch• Two arches from single ascending aorta• Gives off own CCA and subclavian arteries• Some patients may have persistent airway
obstruction related to tracheomalacia from external airway compression
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Double aortic arch
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Cervical aortic arch• Rare• High-riding ascending aorta above level of
clavicles making a sharp downward turn.
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Innominate artery compression of the trachea•Anterior compression of trachea by the
brachiocephalic trunk
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Pulmonary artery anomalies
Abscence or interrruption of pulmonary artery
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Pulmonary artery sling
•L pulm a. from posterior part of R pulm a.•Crosses towards left between oesophagus
and trachea
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Pulmonary venous anomalies
Partial anomalous pulmonary venous drainage
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Stenosis of pulmonary veins
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Left superior vena cava
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Coarctation of the aorta
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Interruption of aortic arch
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Valve lesions
•Aortic valve stenosis
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Pulmonary valve stenosis
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Intracardiac shunts
•VSD
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ASD
Secundum type Primum type
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Patent foramen ovale
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Patent ductus arteriosus
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Thank you• References:
▫1. Frush DP, Herlong RJ (2005) Pediatric thoracic CT angiography. Pediatric Radiology 35:11–5.
▫2. Frush DP, Yoshizumi T (2006) Conventional and CT angiography in children: Dosimetry and dose comparisons. Pediatric Radiology 36: 154-158
▫3. Pediatric body CT, 2nd ed. Siegel MJ, Marilyn J. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Baltimore. 2008. Chapter 8: Great vessels.
▫4. Clinically orientated anatomy, 5th ed. Moore KL, Dalley AF. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Baltimore. 2006.