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Case 43 - Artifacts mimicking pulmonary embolism

from Section 5 - Pulmonary arteries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2015

Pamela T. Johnson
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Stefan L. Zimmerman
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins Medical Centre
Elliot K. Fishman
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins Medical Centre
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Summary

Imaging description

Different artifacts that hamper interpretation during pulmonary artery CT include mixing or flow artifact (also called interrupted contrast enhancement) mimicking a pulmonary embolism, respiratory motion artifact resulting in linear decreased enhancement in segmental arteries that also simulates embolism on axial sections, cardiac motion artifact creating pseudodissection, and beam hardening artifact from dense contrast in the SVC obscuring visualization of the right pulmonary arteries. Owing to poor cardiac output, unopacified and opacified contrast mixed in the main and segmental arteries, mimic pulmonary embolism (Figure 43.1). Contrast enhancement is optimized by using bolus tracking software to tailor the scan timing to the patient's cardiopulmonary status, as described in case 42, and by administering contrast at higher infusion rates. Additionally, a number of studies have reported that hyperventilating the patient and imaging in deep inspiration contribute to flow artifacts that mimic emboli. Expiratory scanning reduces the incidence of focal diminished contrast enhancement and results in higher pulmonary artery enhancement levels.

A more common cause of pseudothrombus is motion artifact (Figure 43.2). Correlation with coronal MPR reveals linear decreased attenuation parallel to the transverse plane secondary to respiratory motion artifact, which underscores the importance of correlating axial findings with MPRs.

Faster scanners (128 slice and beyond) aid in reduction of both cardiac and respiratory motion artifacts. If pulmonary artery dissection is suspected, identification of linear pulsation artifact within other cardiac structures (i.e., aorta) increases confidence that the finding is due to cardiac motion. Finally, the beam-hardening artifact in the superior vena cava, which sends streaks of high density across the right pulmonary arteries, can be reduced by administering a saline chaser after the contrast bolus.

Importance

Interpretation of pulmonary artery CTA requires protocol optimization to maximize contrast enhancement and minimize artifacts. Ideally, protocol design results in a high-quality dataset with excellent pulmonary artery enhancement and absence of these artifacts. In practice, however, image quality is not always perfect.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Cardiovascular Imaging
Pseudolesions, Artifacts, and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 134 - 136
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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References

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5. Pua, U, Tan, CH. CT diagnosis of pulmonary artery dissection – potential pitfall of multidetector CT. Br J Radiol 2009;82:82–3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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