• Imaging of Patent Foramen Ovale with 64-Section Multidetector CT

    Radiology: Volume 249: Number 2—November 2008

    Farhood Saremi, MD Stephanie Channual, BS Aidan Raney, MD Swaminatha V. Gurudevan, MD Jagat Narula, MD,PhD Steven Fowler, MD Amir Abolhoda, MD Jeffrey C. Milliken, MD

    Purpose: To investigate the feasibility of 64-section multidetector computed tomography  (CT)  by using  CT angiography a) to demonstrate anatomic detail of the interatrial sep­tum pertinent to the patent foramen ovale  (PFO), and b) to visually detect left-to-right PFO shunts and compare these findings in patients who also underwent transesoph­ageal echocardiography (TEE!).

    Materials and Methods: In this institutional review board-approved HIPAA-com-pliant study, electrocardiographically gated coronary CT angiograms in 264 patients (159 men, 105 women; mean age, 60 years) were reviewed for PFO morphologic fea­tures. The length and diameter of the opening of the PFO tunnel, presence of atrial septal aneurysm (ASA), and PFO shunts were evaluated. A left-to-right shunt was assigned a grade according to length of contrast agent jet (grade 1, ≤1 cm; grade 2, >1 cm to 2 cm; grade 3, >2 cm). In addition, 23 patients who underwent both modalities were compared (Student t test and linear regression analysis). A difference with P < .05 was significant.

    Results: A flap valve, seen in 101 (38.3%) patients, was patent at the entry into the right atrium (PFO) in 62 patients (61.4% of patients with flap valve, 23.5% of total patients). A left-to-right shunt was detected in 44 (16.7% of total) patients (grade 1, 61.4%; grade 2, 34.1%; grade 3, 4.5%). No shunt was seen in patients without a flap valve. Mean length of PFO tunnel was 7.1 mm in 44 patients with a shunt and 12.1 mm in 57 patients with a flap valve without a shunt (P < .0001). In patients with a tunnel length of 6 mm or shorter, 92.6% of the shunts were seen. ASA was seen in 11 (4.2%) patients; of these patients, a shunt was seen in seven (63.6%). In 23 patients who underwent CT angiography and TEE, both modalities showed a PFO shunt in seven.

    Conclusion: Multidetector CT provides detailed anatomic information about size, morphologic features, and shunt grade of the PFO. Shorter tunnel length and septal aneurysms are fre­quently associated with left-to-right shunts in patients with PFO.