A correlative study of aortic valve rotation angle and thoracic aortic sizes using ECG gated CT angiography
Abstract Objective Various degrees of aortic valve rotation may be seen in individuals with no history of congenital cardiovascular malformations, but its association with aortic sizes has not been studied. Methods Gated computed tomographic (CT angiograms in 217 patients were studied (66.7 ± 15; 22...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of radiology 2017-04, Vol.89, p.60-66 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract Objective Various degrees of aortic valve rotation may be seen in individuals with no history of congenital cardiovascular malformations, but its association with aortic sizes has not been studied. Methods Gated computed tomographic (CT angiograms in 217 patients were studied (66.7 ± 15; 22-97 years old). Aortic diameters were determined at 5 anatomic locations. The length of the aorta from sinus to left subclavian artery was measured. The angle of valve rotation was recorded by measuring the angle between a line connecting the midpoint of the non-coronary sinus to the anterior commissure and another line along the interatrial septum. Rotation angles were correlated with aortic measurements. Patients were separated into two groups based on aortic sizes and into three groups based on age. The threshold for aortic dilatation was set at maximum ascending aorta diameter ≥40 mm (≥ 21 mm body surface area [BSA] indexed). Results No significant difference in rotation angles was seen between the three age groups or between genders. Rotation angles were significantly correlated with maximal, average, and BSA adjustment of the aortic root and ascending aortic measurements. The aortic root angles were significantly different between the dilated versus nondilated aortas. There was no significant association between the rotation angles and age, length of ascending aorta, or diameters of descending aorta. Multivariate adaptive regression splines showed 25° of aortic root rotation as the diagnostic cut off for ascending aorta dilation. Above the 25° rotation, every 10° of increasing rotation was associated with a 3.78 ± 0.87 mm increase in aortic diameter (p |
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ISSN: | 0720-048X 1872-7727 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ejrad.2017.01.009 |