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Emergency Radiology |
1 From the Department of Radiology, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, Calif (H.W., A.D.S., R.B.J.); and Department of Radiology, San Francisco General Hospital, University of California, San Francisco, 1001 Potrero Ave, 1x55A Box 1325, San Francisco, CA 94110 (M.B.G.). From the 2002 RSNA scientific assembly. Received December 31, 2002; revision requested March 10, 2003; final revision received June 29; accepted August 18. Address correspondence to M.B.G. (e-mail: michael.gotway@radiology.ucsf.edu).
PURPOSE: To evaluate periaortic hematoma (PH) near the level of the diaphragm at abdominal computed tomography (CT) as an indirect sign of acute traumatic aortic injury after blunt trauma in patients with mediastinal hematoma.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: From 1998 to 2001, 97 patients with CT evidence of mediastinal hematoma after blunt thoracic trauma were retrospectively identified at two level 1 trauma centers. The presence or absence of PH near the level of the diaphragmatic crura was retrospectively established by a blinded reviewer at each institution. Aortic injury status was determined by reviewing angiographic, surgical, and clinical records. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative productive values, and positive and negative likelihood ratios were calculated.
RESULTS: Among the 97 patients with mediastinal hematoma, 14 had both PH near the level of the diaphragm and aortic injury; six had aortic injuries without PH, five had PH near the level of the diaphragm without aortic injury, and 72 had no evidence of PH near the diaphragm and no aortic injury. Sensitivity for PH near the level of the diaphragm as a sign of aortic injury was 70%; specificity, 94%; positive predictive value, 74%; and negative predictive value, 92%. The positive likelihood ratio for the presence of aortic injury was 10.8, and the negative likelihood ratio was 0.3.
CONCLUSION: PH near the level of the diaphragmatic crura is an insensitive but relatively specific sign for aortic injury after blunt trauma. The presence of this sign at abdominal CT should prompt imaging of the thoracic aorta to evaluate potential thoracic aortic injury.
© RSNA, 2004
Index terms: Abdomen, CT, 70.12115 Aorta, CT, 562.12115 Aorta, injuries, 562.41, 942.41 Emergency radiology Mediastinum, hemorrhage, 67.43 Thorax, injuries, 60.412, 60.4128 Trauma
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