Vol 16, Issue 2 (2020)
IN THIS ISSUE
Cardiovascular Imaging: A Window into Diagnostic and Therapeutic Management
Guest Editor Dipan J. Shah Lends Expertise and Insight to Special Issue on Cardiovascular Imaging
See MoreCardiac Computed Tomography for Comprehensive Coronary Assessment: Beyond Diagnosis of Anatomic Stenosis
Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in Nonischemic Cardiomyopathies
Cardiac Computed Tomography for Structural Heart Disease Assessment and Therapeutic Planning: Focus on Prosthetic Valve Dysfunction
Fluorodeoxyglucose Applications in Cardiac PET: Viability, Inflammation, Infection, and Beyond
Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in Valvular Heart Disease: Assessment of Severity and Myocardial Remodeling
Patient-Specific Modeling for Structural Heart Intervention: Role of 3D Printing Today and Tomorrow
Artificial Intelligence in Cardiovascular Imaging
Myocardial Perfusion Imaging Using Positron Emission Tomography
COVID-19: A Potential Risk Factor for Acute Pulmonary Embolism
Cardiac Lymphoma Presenting with Recurrent STEMI
Complete Heart Block in Systemic Sclerosis with Characterization on Cardiac MRI
Repair of Extent III Thoracoabdominal Aneurysm in the Presence of Aortoiliac Occlusion
A T2-Weighty Discovery: Aortitis on Cardiac MRI with Histopathologic Correlation
Case-Based Points on the Role of Imaging in Kidney Disease
Acute Kidney Injury in Cardiogenic Shock
Cardio-Oncology, Then and Now: An Interview with Barry Trachtenberg
Onconephrology: An Evolving Field
Letter to the Editor in Response to “Cardiac Autonomic Neuropathy in Diabetes Mellitus”
Vol 16, Issue 2 (2020)
Learn about the history and mission of the Methodist DeBakey Cardiovascular Journal, as told by Editor-in-Chief Miguel A. Quinones, M.D., and Fouding Editor William Winters, Jr., M.D.
Building on Dr. Michael E. DeBakey’s commitment to excellence in education, Houston Methodist’s DeBakey Institute for Cardiovascular Education & Training is an epicenter for cardiovascular academic and clinical educational programs that support the provision of optimal care to patients suffering from cardiovascular conditions and diseases.
VisitA 64-year-old man presented with an inferior ST-elevation myocardial infarction. The patient underwent emergent percutaneous coronary intervention of his right coronary artery. Cine cardiac magnetic resonance imaging showed a contained rupture of the inferobasal wall with pseudoaneurysm formation (A). Delayed enhancement image showed the transmural infarct (B). Cardiac computed tomography multiplanar reconstruction also showed an associated ventricular septal defect (C). Transthoracic echo color Doppler image showed flow across ventricular septal defect (D). Although relatively rare, both pseudoaneurysms and ventricular septal defects are well-known mechanical complications after myocardial infarction that increase the risk of mortality. This patient had bovine pericardial patch repair of both defects 3 weeks later, after which he was discharged to cardiac rehabilitation.
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