Emergency Radiology

, Volume 6, Issue 6, pp 339–344 | Cite as

CT diagnosis of cardiac and pericardial injuries

  • K. L. Killeen
  • P. A. Poletti
  • K. Shanmuganathan
  • S. E. Mirvis
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Abstract

The purpose of this retrospective study was to determine the CT findings diagnostic of cardiac and pericardial injury, including signs of pericardial tamponade, in patients suffering from blunt and penetrating trauma. A search of the CT radiology database at a level I trauma center was performed to identify cases in which injury to the heart or pericardium was diagnosed, as well as to identify cases of pericardial tamponade. All cases were reviewed to ascertain the specific CT findings, and medical records were reviewed to assess the influence of CT findings on management and to assess for clinical evidence of pericardial tamponade. Eighteen patients had direct CT evidence of cardiac or pericardial injury, including nine cases of pneumopericardium, eight cases of hemopericardium, and one case of intrapericardial gastric herniation. Four of these patients were found to have direct cardiac injuries. Three additional cases with CT evidence of pericardial tamponade were identified, two secondary to cardiac compression by an anterior mediastinal hematoma and one following repair of left ventricular rupture. Of 11 patients with CT evidence of tamponade, only three were suspected clinically. Cardiac and pericardial injuries are usually diagnosed surgically and are often clinically unsuspected, particularly in blunt trauma. As CT is increasingly utilized as a general screening test for thoracic/abdominal trauma, these injuries may be first suspected on the basis of CT findings, and knowledge of the CT findings of cardiac injury or tamponade is crucial.

Key words Heart, CT – Thorax, CT – Thorax, injuries – Heart, tamponade 

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Copyright information

© American Society of Emergency Radiology 1999

Authors and Affiliations

  • K. L. Killeen
    • 1
  • P. A. Poletti
    • 1
  • K. Shanmuganathan
    • 1
  • S. E. Mirvis
    • 1
  1. 1.Department of Radiology, Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland Medical System, 22 South Greene Street, Baltimore, MD 21201–1595, USA e-mail: KKILL001@umaryland.edu, Tel.: + 1-4 10-3 28 34 77, Fax: + 1-4 10-3 28 06 41US

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