The findings of radionuclide studies in two adult men with systemic arterial supply to the basal segment of the left lung without sequestration are reported. Radionuclide angiography with Tc-99m human serum albumin-diethylenetriamine showed that the lung was perfused by the systemic circulation rather than by the pulmonary artery. Ventilation and perfusion scans with Xe-133 and Tc-99m MAA showed a V/Q mismatch in this area, suggesting the presence of normal bronchial communication without a pulmonary arterial supply. These results also suggest the presence of a left-to-left shunt in the well-ventilated lung in this area. MRI and conventional angiography showed an aberrant artery arising from the descending thoracic aorta, supplying the basal segment of the left lung without a pulmonary artery. In both patients, left lower lobectomy showed normal alveobronchial structures without sequestration. Radionuclide angiography and ventilation/perfusion imaging appear to be reliable noninvasive methods for diagnosing this rare anomaly with a left-to-left shunt.
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