Back to Search Start Over

[Difficulties in diagnosing an aortic arch thrombus]

Authors :
M, Hoffmann
A, Talaszka
A, Liesse
P, Samaille
H, Le Monies de Sagazan
Source :
La Revue de medecine interne. 23(11)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Thrombosis of the aortic arch is a rare and often underdiagnosed source of peripherical arterial embolic events.We report a case with a non-typical initial clinical presentation of polyarteritis nodosa. A mobile thrombus in the aortic arch was secondarily suspected when disseminated arterial embolism appeared. Transthoracic echocardiography failed twice to diagnosticate the source of embolism. The diagnosis was only performed with transesophageal echocardiography and confirmed by computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the thoracic aorta. The thrombus completely disappeared after six months of oral anticoagulant therapy.Although rare, this diagnosis mustn't be disregarded in an etiologic view of recurrent and disseminated peripherical ischemic events (even clinically silent ones) under penalty of detrimental functional consequences due to a delayed diagnosis.

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
02488663
Volume :
23
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
La Revue de medecine interne
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........00c7d4645d71463eaa961644b12d0728