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Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
Training Collections
Library Memberships
On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 1 min.
4 topics, 17 min.
4 topics, 18 min.
2 topics, 6 min.
3 topics, 17 min.
4 topics, 25 min.
Optimal Use of Ambra to Review Coronary CT Cases in this Course
7 m.Approach to Reading Coronary CT in Patients with Known CAD: Assessing Image Quality
7 m.Approach to Reading Coronary CT in Patients with Known CAD: Evaluating Coronary Arteries
10 m.Approach to Reading Coronary CT in Patients with Known CAD: Additional Testing
4 m.17 topics, 1 hr. 38 min.
Moderate Stenosis
8 m.Severe Stenosis, Single Vessel
7 m.Severe Stenosis, Complex Disease With CT-FFR Discrepancy
8 m.Severe Stenosis, Complex Disease (Obtuse Marginal Branch)
9 m.Moderate Stenosis in the Mid-LAD
4 m.Native Coronary Aneurysm
3 m.Stent Occlusion
8 m.Total Occlusion
9 m.Total Occlusion, Complex Disease
7 m.Severe Stenosis With Serial Lesions, Known MI, High-risk Patient
8 m.Severe Stenosis With Serial Lesions, Emergency Chest Pain
7 m.Moderate Stenosis With Serial Lesions
5 m.Role of CT FFR in Translesional Gradient Evaluation, Low-risk Patient in Mid-40s
6 m.Role of CT FFR in Translesional Gradient Evaluation, Setting of a Stent
4 m.CT FFR Limitation: Small Vessel Caliber
4 m.CT FFR Limitation: Motion Artifact (Case 1)
6 m.CT FFR Limitation: Motion Artifact (Case 2)
3 m.6 topics, 37 min.
5 topics, 15 min.
7 topics, 17 min.
6 topics, 33 min.
1 topic, 2 min.
0:00
Okay, this patient came in for an emergency scan, uh,
0:04
as part of their inpatient admission.
0:05
It was a elevated troponin value,
0:08
but situation where there was ambiguity wasn't
0:11
yet a cardiac cath,
0:13
but it seemed like a, something
0:15
to help clarify the diagnosis.
0:16
And you can see out sclerosis definitely confirmed.
0:19
Um, I'll just move over to the CT angiogram phases
0:23
and point out a few things.
0:25
One of them is that, um,
0:27
the extensive ACL sclerosis had some areas of, of stenosis.
0:30
Here's your LED. Um,
0:32
the circumflex is a relatively small vessel.
0:35
Here's that dominant right coronary artery
0:38
and, uh, a lot of stenosis there.
0:40
Um, so not a surprise that there's obstructive disease.
0:43
Um, but one of the things we like to do in the acute
0:46
and the emergency setting is look at a multi-phase, uh,
0:49
view, which we've talked about on a few of the cases.
0:52
So again, if you're gonna look at the myocardium
0:55
and the valves, it's good to get into a true cardiac plane.
0:59
I can see here that it's very noisy. That's intentional.
1:01
We're saving radiation. We don't really need these,
1:03
they're just kind of collateral benefit.
1:04
So we're gonna look at an average intensity projection.
1:07
I like eight millimeters.
1:08
And let's look at the wall motion since we now know there's
1:11
stenosis and it's an acute setting,
1:12
so there's very good chance that
1:14
that's causing a wall motion abnormality.
1:16
And so I'm just gonna play this movie for you.
1:18
Uh, and one thing I notice here is that the, um,
1:21
anterior lethal lid, mitral valve, uh,
1:25
functions very normally on this, uh,
1:27
three chamber cine view,
1:28
but the inferior papillary muscle doesn't move.
1:32
And what you're seeing here,
1:33
and I'll show you that on the, uh, um, short axis view
1:36
as well, is that when you have supply
1:39
to the inferior wall compromised,
1:40
and we know there's an RCA stenosis,
1:42
maybe even occlusion here, um, you can have a,
1:45
something called ischemic mitral regurgitation.
1:47
And that was known by an echo echocardiogram, uh,
1:50
that followed the ct.
1:51
Um, but the papillary muscle can become
1:54
dysfunctional because it's ischemic.
1:55
And so this is ischemic mitral regurgitation.
1:58
You can see the left atriums enlarging.
2:00
If I looked at the lungs, you might see regional edema,
2:03
but very important to pick this up
2:05
because, uh, ischemic mitral regurgitation is different than
2:08
degenerative mitral regurgitation.
2:10
And you can also see here
2:11
that there's maybe some hypo
2:12
enhancement of the inferior wall there.
2:14
Um, and there's definitely some
2:16
hypokinesis in the inferior wall.
2:18
The papillary muscles have a much smaller blood supply,
2:21
but it stems from the same regional territory.
2:23
So anterior was just fine,
2:25
but the posterior papillary muscle, not
2:27
so much ischemic mitral regurgitation.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Okay, this patient came in for an emergency scan, uh,
0:04
as part of their inpatient admission.
0:05
It was a elevated troponin value,
0:08
but situation where there was ambiguity wasn't
0:11
yet a cardiac cath,
0:13
but it seemed like a, something
0:15
to help clarify the diagnosis.
0:16
And you can see out sclerosis definitely confirmed.
0:19
Um, I'll just move over to the CT angiogram phases
0:23
and point out a few things.
0:25
One of them is that, um,
0:27
the extensive ACL sclerosis had some areas of, of stenosis.
0:30
Here's your LED. Um,
0:32
the circumflex is a relatively small vessel.
0:35
Here's that dominant right coronary artery
0:38
and, uh, a lot of stenosis there.
0:40
Um, so not a surprise that there's obstructive disease.
0:43
Um, but one of the things we like to do in the acute
0:46
and the emergency setting is look at a multi-phase, uh,
0:49
view, which we've talked about on a few of the cases.
0:52
So again, if you're gonna look at the myocardium
0:55
and the valves, it's good to get into a true cardiac plane.
0:59
I can see here that it's very noisy. That's intentional.
1:01
We're saving radiation. We don't really need these,
1:03
they're just kind of collateral benefit.
1:04
So we're gonna look at an average intensity projection.
1:07
I like eight millimeters.
1:08
And let's look at the wall motion since we now know there's
1:11
stenosis and it's an acute setting,
1:12
so there's very good chance that
1:14
that's causing a wall motion abnormality.
1:16
And so I'm just gonna play this movie for you.
1:18
Uh, and one thing I notice here is that the, um,
1:21
anterior lethal lid, mitral valve, uh,
1:25
functions very normally on this, uh,
1:27
three chamber cine view,
1:28
but the inferior papillary muscle doesn't move.
1:32
And what you're seeing here,
1:33
and I'll show you that on the, uh, um, short axis view
1:36
as well, is that when you have supply
1:39
to the inferior wall compromised,
1:40
and we know there's an RCA stenosis,
1:42
maybe even occlusion here, um, you can have a,
1:45
something called ischemic mitral regurgitation.
1:47
And that was known by an echo echocardiogram, uh,
1:50
that followed the ct.
1:51
Um, but the papillary muscle can become
1:54
dysfunctional because it's ischemic.
1:55
And so this is ischemic mitral regurgitation.
1:58
You can see the left atriums enlarging.
2:00
If I looked at the lungs, you might see regional edema,
2:03
but very important to pick this up
2:05
because, uh, ischemic mitral regurgitation is different than
2:08
degenerative mitral regurgitation.
2:10
And you can also see here
2:11
that there's maybe some hypo
2:12
enhancement of the inferior wall there.
2:14
Um, and there's definitely some
2:16
hypokinesis in the inferior wall.
2:18
The papillary muscles have a much smaller blood supply,
2:21
but it stems from the same regional territory.
2:23
So anterior was just fine,
2:25
but the posterior papillary muscle, not
2:27
so much ischemic mitral regurgitation.
Report
Faculty
Brian Ghoshhajra, MD, MBA, MSCCT
Academic Chief, Cardiovascular Imaging and Associate Chair, Operations Analytics
Massachusetts General Hospital / Harvard Medical School
Tags
Vascular
Myocardium
Coronary arteries
Cardiac Chambers
Cardiac CT (SCCT Cat B1 Video Case)
Cardiac
CTA
CT
Angiography
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