Background Main pulmonary artery diameter (mPA) and ratio of mPA to ascending aorta diameter (ratio PA) derived from chest CT are commonly reported in clinical practice. We determined the age and sex-specific distribution and normal reference values for mPA and ratio PA by CT in an asymptomatic community-based population. Methods and Results In 3171 men and women (mean age 51 ± 10 years, 51% men) from the Framingham Heart Study, a non-contrast ECG gated eight-slice cardiac multi-detector CT was performed. We measured the mPA and transverse axial diameter of the ascending aorta at the level of the bifurcation of the right pulmonary artery and calculated the ratio PA. We defined the healthy referent cohort (n=706) as those without obesity, hypertension, current and past smokers, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, history of pulmonary embolism, diabetics, cardiovascular disease, and heart valvular surgery. The mean mPA diameter in the overall cohort was 25.1 ± 2.8mm and mean ratio PA was 0.77 ± 0.09. The sex-specific 90th percentile cutoff value for mPA diameter was 28.9 mm in men and 26.9 mm in women and was associated with increase risk for self-reported dyspnea (adjusted odds ratio 1.31, p=0.02). The 90th percentile cutoff value for ratio PA of the healthy referent group was 0.91, similar between gender, but decreased with increasing age (range 0.82 to 0.94), though not associated with dyspnea. Conclusions For simplicity, we established 29 mm in men and 27 mm in women as sex-specific normative reference values for mPA and 0.9 for ratio PA.
Current screening and detection of asymptomatic aortic aneurysms is largely based on uniform cut-point diameters. Our objective was to define normal aortic diameters in asymptomatic men and women in a community-based cohort and to determine the association between aortic diameters and traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD).Measurements of the diameter of the ascending aorta(AA), descending thoracic aorta (DTA), infrarenal abdominal (IRA) and lower abdominal aorta (LAA) were acquired from 3,431 Framingham Heart Study participants. Mean diameters were stratified by sex, age, and body surface area (BSA). Univariate associations with risk factor levels were examined and multivariable linear regression analysis was used to assess the significance of covariate-adjusted relations with aortic diameters. For men, the average diameter was 34.1 mm for AA, 25.8 mm for DTA, 19.3 mm for IRA and 18.7 mm for LAA.For women, the average diameter was 31.9 mm for AA, 23.1 mm for DTA, 16.7 mm for IRA, and 16.0 mm for LAA. The mean aorticdiameters were strongly correlated (p<0.0001) with age and BSA in age-adjusted analyses, and these relations remained significant in multivariable regression analyses. Positive associations of diastolic BP with AA and DTA in both sexes and pack years of cigarette smoking with DTA in women and with IRA in men and women were observed. In conclusion, average diameters of the thoracic and abdominal aorta by CT are larger in men compared with women, vary significantly with age and BSA, and are associated with modifiable CVD risk factors including diastolic blood pressure and cigarette smoking.
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