4. By the time the diagnosis of
pulmonary arterial hypertension is made,
90% of patients have an abnormal chest
radiograph .
-low sensitivity and specificity.
Plain film
5. -elevated cardiac apex due to
right ventricular hypertrophy.
-enlarged right atrium.
-prominent pulmonary
outflow tract.
-enlarged pulmonary arteries.
-pruning of peripheral
pulmonary vessels.
(+ve) Findings :
16. 1- CT is good , noninvasive , used to
confirm presence of pulmonary
hypertension.
2- It is useful in delineating the anatomic
detail of the pulmonary vasculature.
3-CTPA is the best method for
demonstrating emboli.
4- Contrast-enhanced images may show
intraluminal abnormalities in the arteries and
veins and can detect emboli if it’s large.
Advantages of CT
17. PH signs on CT
Extr-acardiac
Cardiacparenchymal
18. Enlarged pulmonary trunk >29 mm diameter is
often used as a general predictive cut-off
Enlarged pulmonary arteries
Mural calcification in central pulmonary arteries
Evidence of previous pulmonary emboli
Extra-cardiac vascular
signs:
19. T angiogram shows dilatation (29 mm or more) of
the main pulmonary artery.
20. Axial contrast-enhanced CT scan ,shows central pulmonary
artery dilatation with aneurysmal enlargement of the left lower
lobe pulmonary artery .
21. -Right ventricular hypertrophy: defined as wall
thickness of more than 4 mm.
-Straightening or bowing (towards the left
ventricle) of the interventricular septum
- Right ventricular dilatation
- Decreased right ventricular ejection fraction
- Dilatation of the inferior vena cava and
hepatic veins
- Pericardial effusion
Cardiac signs :
22. right ventricular myocardium (white arrow) is more than 4
mm thick. Straightening of the interventricular septum
(black arrow) also is seen.
23. right ventricular dilatation, which is defined as a diameter ratio (the ratio
of the right ventricular diameter [black arrow] to the left ventricular
diameter [white arrow]) greater than 1:1 at the midventricular level.
24. reflux of contrast material into the inferior vena cava,
which is dilated, and hepatic veins
25. Centrilobular ground-glass nodules (Cholesterol
granuloma).
Neovascularity: tiny serpiginous intrapulmonary
vessels that often emerge from centrilobular
arterioles.
Parenchymal signs:
31. - It’s performed to estimate the pulmonary artery
systolic pressure and to assess right ventricular size,
thickness, and function.
- evaluate right atrial size, left ventricular systolic
and diastolic function, and valve function.
- detecting pericardial effusions and intracardiac
shunts.
- uses Doppler ultrasound to estimate the
pulmonary artery systolic pressure.
Advantages
32. 1. Right ventricular enlargement
(RVE).
2. Right ventricular hypertrophy
(RVH).
3. Right atrial enlargement
(RAE).
4. Functional tricuspid
regurgitation (TR) with a
high velocity regurgitant jet
by Doppler (TR jet).
5. The interventricular septum
is shifted toward the left
ventricular cavity.
Main findings
33. The short axis view from a 2-D echocardiogram shows
significant right ventricular pressure and volume
overload as a result of pulmonary hypertension.
34. The short axis view from a 2-D echocardiogram shows
significant right ventricular pressure and volume overload as
a result of pulmonary hypertension.
36. Right heart catheterization may be
required.
-Pulmonary angiography is the most
accurate modality for evaluating the
anatomy and pathophysiology of
pulmonary hypertension
-The disadvantage :
it is an invasive procedure as one cannulates
the right side of the heart and thea
pulmonary artery.
37. Selective right pulmonary arteriogram demonstrates large central
pulmonary arteries and attenuation of the peripheral vessels.
38. Pulmonary hypertension. Selective left pulmonary arteriogram
reveals large central pulmonary arteries and attenuation of the
peripheral vessels
39. Angiograms showing a healthy pulmonary artery (left) and a
pulmonary artery with numerous blockages (right).
41. The disadvantages with MRI:
-include limitations in individuals with cardiac-
pacemakers and defibrillators.
- its limited availability and cost, and difficulty in
assessing estimate PA pressures with MRI.
MRI with contrast enhancement allows one to
distinguish between the pulmonary vasculature
and mediastinal adenopathy
Advantages :
46. -The main radiological features in Diagnosis
of pulmonary Hypertension in :
-plain –X-Ray.
-Computed tomography.
-Echocardiography.
-MRI.
-Angiography.
- Advantages / Disadvantages of each one .
Summary