1. Giant coronary aneurysm in adult Kawasaki disease: angiographic, 64-slice coronary MDCT and cardiac MRI appearances
- Author
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Ramon Martos, Charles McCreery, Sinead M. Walsh, and Jonathan D. Dodd
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome ,Coronary Angiography ,Aneurysm ,Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Humans ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Coronary Aneurysm ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Right coronary artery ,Ventricular fibrillation ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Kawasaki disease ,Radiology ,business ,Vasculitis - Abstract
Kawasaki disease is a small-to-medium-vessel vasculitis that preferentially affects infants and young children. This condition is rare in adults, and therefore the diagnosis can easily be missed in a patient presenting to a primary care clinic. We report an unusual case of a patient who presented with ventricular fibrillation on a background of adult Kawasaki disease. To identify the advantages of using coronary multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in diagnosing adult Kawasaki disease. We studied a 52-year-old patient with Kawasaki disease using coronary angiography, cardiac MDCT and MRI. Invasive coronary angiography demonstrated an occluded right coronary artery (RCA) and appearances suspicious for a calcified giant RCA aneurysm. The full extent of the aneurismal RCA was depicted with MDCT. Cardiac MRI revealed a chronic inferior segment myocardial infarction representing an arrhythmia substrate. Our case highlights the increasing utility of contrast-enhanced cardiac MRI and MDCT in the diagnosis of this rare condition in adults.
- Published
- 2009
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