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Contrast enhanced computed tomography showing an isolated ventricular septal diverticulum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2009

Farid Aliyev*
Affiliation:
Istanbul University, 1Department of Cardiology, Division of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, Institute of Cardiology, Haseki-Fatih, Istanbul and
Hakan Erkan
Affiliation:
Department of Cardiology, Cerrahpaşa Medical School, Cerrahpaşa-Fatih, Istanbul, Turkey
Cengizhan Türkoğlu
Affiliation:
Istanbul University, 1Department of Cardiology, Division of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, Institute of Cardiology, Haseki-Fatih, Istanbul and
*
Correspondence to: Farid Aliyev, MD, Istanbul University, Institute of Cardiology, Department of Cardiology, Division of Pacemaker and Electrophysiology, 34098 Haseki-Fatih, Istanbul, Turkey. Tel: ++90 505 389 63 91; Fax: ++90 212 571 41 01; E-mail: drfaridaliyev@yahoo.com.tr
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Abstract

Type
Images in Congenital Cardiac Disease
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

A 22-year-old male patient, admitted with atypical chest pain of sudden onset, had a holosystolic murmur at the apex, graded at 2 out of 6. His electrocardiogram was normal. Transthoracic echocardiography (Fig. 1), when analysed in apical four-chamber (a) and long axis (b) views, revealed an isolated diverticulum of the muscular ventricular septum (arrow). There was no obstruction of the right ventricular outflow, no shunting through the diverticulum, and only mild regurgitation across the mitral valve. More detailed evaluation by contrast enhanced computed tomography (Fig. 2 and video 1 – see www.journals.cambridge.org/CTY), when analysed in sagittal two-chamber (a), short-axial (b and d), and coronal four-chamber (c) views, confirmed the presence of a large muscular out-pouching (asterisk) of the ventricular septum close to the region of the membranous part of the septum. Careful interrogation of the images showed that the out-pouching had muscular walls, and hence was a diverticulum of the muscular ventricular septum, rather than an aneurysm of the membranous septum.

Figure 1

Figure 2

While refined noninvasive imaging has increased the specificity of diagnosis of left ventricular diverticulums,Reference Srichai, Hecht, Kim and Jacobs1 their classification, aetiology, and significance remain controversial. Myocardial noncompaction was excluded in our patient, since there was only a single ventricular recess. Intracardiac shunting might have favoured a diagnosis of septal aneurysm, but was not present in our patient. It is not possible to know whether this malformation represents the residua of a tunnel-like ventricular septal defect, which closed spontaneously. In the absence of obstruction of the right verntricular outflow tract, or a ventricular septal defect, surgical intervention was not recommended. The patient remains under careful observation.

Financial support: None

Conflict of interest: None

References

1.Srichai, MB, Hecht, EM, Kim, DC, Jacobs, JE. Ventricular diverticula on cardiac CT: more common than previously thought. Am J Roentgenol 2007; 189: 204208.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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