Case Report

Incidental Finding of a Large Mobile Aortic Arch Mass during Conventional Angiography

Abstract

Thromboembolism occurs commonly in general practice and leads to significant health burden. Apart from cardiac sources, aortic atherosclerotic plaques contribute considerably to thromboembolism. A 63-year-old diabetic hypertensive woman referred to our center due to exertional chest pain unresponsive to optimal medical therapy and underwent coronary angiography. Owing to resistance during guide-wire advancement, an aortography was performed. Aortic arch injection demonstrated a large suspended mass distal to the left subclavian artery with free movement in the descending thoracic aorta. Echocardiography revealed widespread atherosclerotic changes in the aortic arch with a large hypermobile mass. Dual-source multi-slice (2 × 128:256) computed tomography angiography of the whole aorta revealed a large floating mass (in favor of a thrombus) in the distal portion of the arch. The patient underwent coronary artery bypass grafting due to severe coronary artery disease. The intra-aortic mass, which was actually a large atherosclerotic plaque, was resected at the same session. She was discharged uneventfully and during a 1-year follow-up, she had no embolic events.

Files
IssueVol 12 No 4 (2017): J Teh Univ Heart Ctr QRcode
SectionCase Report(s)
Keywords
Aorta thoracic • Thromboembolism • Angiography

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Aghajani H, Yazdani S, Ghafaripoor M, Shajari Z. Incidental Finding of a Large Mobile Aortic Arch Mass during Conventional Angiography. J Tehran Heart Cent. 2018;12(4):171-174.