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Thoracic Aortic Calcification: Diagnostic,Prognostic, and Management Considerations
Authors:Milind Y. Desai  Paul C. Cremer  Paul Schoenhagen
Affiliation:1. Department of Cardiovascular Imaging, Heart and Vascular Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio;2. Cardiovascular Section, Imaging Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio
Abstract:
Thoracic aortic calcification (TAC) is associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, and for the cardiovascular imager, is predominantly encountered in 4 settings: 1) incidentally, for example, during a coronary artery calcium scan; 2) as part of dedicated screening; 3) in the evaluation of an embolic event; or 4) in procedural planning. This review focuses on TAC in these contexts. Within atherosclerosis, TAC is common, variable in extent, and begins in the intima with a patchy distribution. In metabolic disorders, aortitis, and radiation-associated cardiovascular disease, calcification preferentially involves the media and is often more concentric. As an incidental finding, atherosclerotic TAC provides limited incremental discriminative value, and current data do not support screening. After an embolic event, the demonstration of thoracic atheroma provides diagnostic clarity, but has limited treatment implications. Before any procedure, the plan often changes if the most severe form of TAC, a porcelain aorta, is discovered.
Keywords:computed tomography  echocardiography  thoracic aortic calcification  AS  aortic stenosis  CABG  coronary artery bypass grafting  CAC  coronary artery calcium  CAD  coronary artery disease  CI  confidence interval  CT  computed tomography  ECC  extra-coronary calcium  MI  myocardial infarction  MRI  magnetic resonance imaging  OR  odds ratio  RACD  radiation-associated cardiac disease  TAC  thoracic aortic calcification  TEE  transesophageal echocardiography  TTE  transthoracic echocardiography
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