• Left Atrial Appendage Thrombi in Stroke Patients: Detection with Two-Phase Cardiac CT Angiography versus Transesophageal Echocardiography

    Jin Hur, MD Young Jin Kim, MD Hye-Jeong Lee, MD Jong-Won Ha, MD Ji Hoe Heo, MD Eui-Young Choi, MD Chi-Young Shim, MD TaeHoonKim, MD Ji Eun Nam, MD Kyu Ok Choe, MD Byoung Wook Choi, MD

    Purpose: To assess the diagnostic accuracy of two-phase 64-section cardiac computed tomographic (CT) angiography for de­tection of left atrial appendage (LAA) thrombi and differ­entiation between thrombus and circulatory stasis in pa­tients with stroke, with transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) as the reference standard.

    Materials and Methods: This study was institutional review board approved, and all patients gave written informed consent. Fifty-five consecu­tive patients (36 men, 19 women; mean age, 61 years) who had recently experienced a stroke, had high-risk factors for thrombus formation, and underwent both two-phase 64-section cardiac CT angiography and TEE up to 5 days apart were examined. Agreement between CT and TEE for detection of thrombus was assessed with k statistics. For quantitative analysis, the LAA-ascending aorta attenua­tion ratio (LAA/AA, in Hounsfield units) was measured on early- and late-phase CT images. The significance of differ­ences, in CT attenuation measurements were assessed by using the Student t test.

    Results: A total of 14 thrombi were detected in the 55 patients at TEE. With TEE as the reference standard, the overall sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of cardiac CT angiography for the detection of thrombus in the LAA were 100% (14 of 14 patients), 98% (40 of 41 patients), 93% (14 of 15 patients), and 100% (40 of 40 patients), respectively. Concordance between car­diac CT angiography and TEE for the detection of throm­bus in the LAA was high (overall k = 0.953). Mean LAA/AA values were significantly different between thrombus (0.29 HU ± 0.12 [standard deviation]) and cir­culatory stasis (0.85 HU ± 0.12) on late-phase CT images (P< .001).

    Conclusion: Two-phase 64-section cardiac CT angiography is a nonin­vasive sensitive modality for detecting LAA thrombi and differentiating thrombus from circulatory stasis in stroke patients.