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Can CT pulmonary angiography allow assessment of severity and prognosis in patients presenting with pulmonary embolism? What the radiologist needs to know.

Ghaye B, Ghuysen A, Bruyere PJ, D'Orio V, Dondelinger RF.
Department of Medical Imaging, University Hospital of Liege, Sart Tilman B35, B-4000 Liege, Belgium. bghaye@chu.ulg.ac.be

Radiographics. 2006 Jan-Feb;26(1):23-39; discussion 39-40

Computed tomographic (CT) pulmonary angiography has been established as a first-line diagnostic technique in patients suspected of having pulmonary embolism. Risk stratification is important in patients with pulmonary embolism because optimal management, monitoring, and therapeutic strategies depend on the prognosis. Acute right-sided heart failure is known to be responsible for circulatory collapse and death in patients with severe pulmonary embolism. Acute right-sided heart failure can be assessed at CT pulmonary angiography by measuring the dimensions of right-sided heart cavities or upstream venous structures, such as the superior vena cava or azygos vein. The magnitude of pulmonary embolism can be calculated at CT pulmonary angiography by applying angiographic scores adapted for CT (Miller and Walsh scores) or dedicated CT scores (Qanadli and Mastora scores). The advent of CT pulmonary angiography performed with electrocardiographic gating permits new advances in assessment of acute right-sided heart failure, such as measurement of the ventricular ejection fraction. Although such findings may be useful for assessment of treatment effectiveness, their effect on prognosis in patients with severe pulmonary embolism is debated in the literature. (c) RSNA, 2006.

Posted via PubMed for educational and discussion purposes only.
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