Interactive Transcript
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This patient, um, is somewhat interesting in
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that they showed up in our emergency department
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and, um, like many patients started
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with a pulmonary embolism rule out, uh,
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dyspnea kind of vague symptoms.
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And, um, turned out they were in some heart failure.
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You can see the pleural effusions, no pe surprise, surprise,
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uh, not the perfect study, also not much in the way of, um,
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atherosclerosis on this pulmonary angiogram.
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So, uh, now that we know they're in heart failure, one
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of the important differentials is what's the
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cause of heart failure?
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And, uh, CT angiogram is a pretty good way to get
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that first fork in the decision tree, which is,
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is it ischemic heart disease or not?
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Ischemic heart disease can be treated, uh,
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non-ischemic heart disease can be very difficult.
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Um, now I showed you a lot of high calcium scores.
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This one's zero. So, uh, still see the CHFI can, I think
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that left atrium is enlarged.
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Um, but now that we know that there can be a disconnect
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between the degree of calcium
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and stenosis, uh, it can be very important.
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And so, uh, this patient deserves a full evaluation.
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I'm not gonna let my guard down.
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I need to clear every segment.
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Left main looks pretty good to me.
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Um, but immediately you get to that LED
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and look at that tight stenosis.
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So, um, might an acute coronary stenosis cause
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some heart failure symptoms?
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For sure. Um, I'm going to give a little mip
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and you can see that's a completely lipid rich stenosis.
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So, um, there's a lot of cute hashtags on the, uh,
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internet talking about, you know, power of zero calcium.
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That all falls away.
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In fact, I think it's a really huge disservice if you have a
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calcium score of zero and you have symptoms.
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I don't really care. It's a pretest risk thing,
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but it's not a anatomic thing.
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And so I can tell you now we've got a tight, uh,
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it looks sub totally occluded,
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but we know that based on the lesion length,
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it's probably not a total occlusion.
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Um, we know the resolution
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of the catheter angiogram will be higher.
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So, uh, about a nine 10 millimeter area of stenosis.
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And I can see what looks like it may be an infarct just
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'cause it's a, uh, little thinning of the myocardial wall.
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RCA looks all right.
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Uh, and circumflex really didn't notice anything.
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But, uh, I am drawn to this interseptal wall,
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so we're gonna remember to make cardiac planes.
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We're also gonna remember to not use mip,
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but rather average intensity projection.
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We're gonna make our reformats
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and we're going to look for relative thinning.
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I do see that, see the interseptal wall is thinner
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interlateral, inferior septal.
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And so the interseptal thinnings,
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that's a territory which sure does match the LED
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and what picked up, uh, on our eyes on that, uh,
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axial plane is confirmed here.
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This is a true four chamber view.
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And you can also then take this
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and go into a three chamber
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View.
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And it does look like there's a little bit of a remodeling
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and some sub endocardial hypoperfusion
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of the wraparound LED territory.
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It's nice to have a delay.
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It's good for rolling out thrombus.
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Um, this is a, a minute or two later.
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Doesn't help me a ton in terms of late contrast enhancement,
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but I do think I confirm that there is some of
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that hypo density is, uh, persisting.
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Let's take a look at the angiogram.
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This is just part of the catheterization,
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but this is an intravascular ultrasound, um,
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which helps you look at things like plaque ruptures,
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vessel walls, uh,
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and it's a pullback, so it's difficult to suss out.
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If you can, um, imagine this just like a CT scan where the,
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it only shows you the area around the lumen,
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that can be a helpful feature.
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Okay, so here's that invasive angiogram.
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Looks like we started with a right-sided injection.
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No surprise there, that's a patent vessel.
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But pay attention here in the late views, you can see
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brisk collaterals, retrograde filling that LED,
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so severe stenosis or subtotal occlusion.
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Um, so the cause of the CHF is no longer a mystery.
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This is, uh, coronary disease.
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Here's a catheter down the, uh, uh, circumflex,
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and there's that LED subtotal occlusion
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pretty dynamic process.
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Um, you can see here that it,
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it might have become a total occlusion in the day
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between the, um, CT scan and the calf.
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Uh, heart failure explained coronary diseases found, um,
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and it's the lipid rich, highly active type of plaque.
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We would also interpret a little differently if we knew
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that there were elevated troponin values and whatnot.
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But, uh, a CHF presentation due
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to really proximal LED disease
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with you're already watching a,
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a successful stenting in progress.
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And let's just check the final result.
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So, cataracts four a, uh,
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assuming it's an acute presentation,
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it would be different management recommendations,
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but a much more urgent catheterization if it's
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an acute situation.
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Beautiful result there with good stent.
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So use of CT to clarify congestive heart failure, uh,
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and rule in or out ischemic heart disease.
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In this case in.