CASE 13785 Published on 06.07.2016

Congenital subaortic diverticulum associated to bicuspid aortic valve

Section

Cardiovascular

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Diego Páez Granda, Daniel Rodríguez Sánchez, Antonio Navarro Baño, Santiago Ibañez Caturla, Juan Francisco Martínez Martínez

Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Arrixaca,
Murcia, España
Patient

64 years, female

Categories
Area of Interest Cardiovascular system, Cardiac ; Imaging Technique CT
Clinical History
A 64-year-old woman with history of severe aortic valve stenosis, accompanied with
aneurysmatic dilatation of ascending thoracic aorta. She complained of atypical chest pain that worsened during the past few months.
Imaging Findings
Cardiac diverticula look like diverticula elsewhere in the body, as tubular structures originating from the endocardium, bulging against the myocardium. It is important to be aware of their presence and make multiplanar reconstructions (MPR) to correctly characterize them. In this case the CT study depicted a subaortic diverticulum originating from the left ventricle. There was no communication between the left and right ventricles (no contrast going through the diverticulum). The diverticulum neck measured 7 mm and the depth was 9 mm. There was a calcified bicuspid valve. The ascending aorta was dilated. The ascending aortic diameter measured from adventitia to adventitia was 4.5 cm.
Discussion
A. Background: Ventricle diverticulum is an exceptional radiological finding. There are very few cases reported in the medical literature. An approximate incidence of 0.4% cases in post mortem studies has been demonstrated [1, 2].
B. Clinical Perspective: It could be an isolated and incidental finding, but it is well known that almost half of the cases are accompanied by other middle thoracoabdominal malformations [2, 3]. Bicuspid aortic valve is one of the cardiac malformations that has been related to this finding [2, 3]. The onset of complications may be accompanied by the appearance of symptoms. These complications could be thrombosis, embolism, cardiac rupture, congestive heart failure, ventricular arrhythmias, or valvular abnormalities [4].
C. Imaging Findings: Cardiac diverticulum is an outpouching structure that contains endocardium, myocardium, and pericardium and contracts with systole [5]. It It looks like a tubular structure originating in the endocardium, bulging against the myocardium. They are narrow-mouthed with a wide outpouching, extending beyond the confines of the anatomic ventricular cavity and myocardial margin [6]. These morphological features help to differentiate them from other congenital findings, like clefts [6]. It is important to be aware of their presence and make multiplanar reconstructions (MPR) to correctly characterize them.
D: Outcome: The treatment options vary between different institutions. Some surgeons promote an early surgical excision for all diagnosed cardiac diverticula [7]. Other physicians support a more conservative management of this pathology, with close follow-up, indicating surgical intervention based on the clinical condition of the patient and the associated abnormalities [7].
E: Take Home Message, Teaching Points: Although cardiac diverticulum is an extremely uncommon finding in imaging, the radiologist needs to be aware of it presence especially in patients with congenital cardiac disease. Some authors have related the presence of diverticulum with HCM; further research is needed. The treatment of this finding has not been well established, and it mainly depends on the clinical situation of the patient.
Differential Diagnosis List
Congenital subaortic diverticulum
Ventricular septa rupture
Ventricular aneurysm
Myocardial cleft
Ventricular pseudoaneurysm
Final Diagnosis
Congenital subaortic diverticulum
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/13785
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.13785
ISSN: 1563-4086
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