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DOI 10.1007/s10140-010-0925-4
CASE REPORT
Received: 29 September 2010 / Accepted: 24 November 2010 / Published online: 14 January 2011
# Am Soc Emergency Radiol 2011
Abstract Myocardial infarction after blunt chest trauma has We report two cases of young men who experienced acute
been reported in only few cases, and mechanisms of this myocardial infarction following blunt chest trauma, which
complication have rarely been described. We report two cases was confirmed by ECG-gated CT and cardiac MR imaging.
of coronary artery lesions, one parietal hematoma of right
coronary artery and one dissection of the left main coronary
artery, which resulted in acute myocardial infarction following Case report 1
a blunt chest trauma. In these two cases, cardiac CT and MRI
were useful to noninvasively explore these lesions. A 38-year-old man was admitted in the emergency suite
after a car crash accident. He presented a complex shoulder
Keywords Myocardial infarction . Blunt chest trauma . fracture, and chest pain, attributed to rib lesions. The
Gated CT scan . Cardiac MRI troponine raised to 34 ng/ml 6 h after admission. ECG was
considered as normal. CT was performed in order to rule
out aortic or coronary traumatic involvement.
Introduction ECG-gated CT showed a severe proximal stenosis of right
coronary artery, due to a parietal hematoma. The left coronary
Myocardial infarction is a very uncommon complication artery was normal, without any atherosclerotic lesion (Fig. 1a).
following blunt chest trauma, and is probably underdiagnosed Cardiac MRI showed inferior wall edema on T2-
among the other causes of posttraumatic chest pain. The early weighted images, (Fig. 1b) and myocardial infarction on
recognition of this complication is the mainstay of an late enhancement images in the right coronary artery area,
appropriate patient management. CT enables a comprehensive involving about 25% to 50% of myocardial thickness
assessment of thoracic lesions [1]; however, when symptoms (Fig. 1c). The firstpass perfusion sequence showed delayed
and electrocardiographic findings are compatible with acute subendocardial enhancement in the same area (Fig. 1d),
myocardial infarction, the use of ECG-gated CT acquisitions whereas 3D steady state free precession (SSFP) coronary
may be useful, even completed by a cardiac MR examination. MRA showed a hypersignal around the ostium of right
coronary artery, due to the hematoma (Fig. 1e).
G. Malbranque : D. Himbert : P. G. Steg A medical treatment was instituted and the patient was
Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Bichat APHP,
discharged from the hospital 10 days later.
46 Rue Henri Huchard,
75018 Paris, France
c d
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