2017
DOI: 10.14503/thij-15-5704
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Left Internal Thoracic Artery Graft to Left Anterior Descending Coronary Artery after Blunt-Chest-Trauma Myocardial Infarction: 14-Year Outcome

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(2 citation statements)
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“…In addition, another case report described a patient with a hemothorax caused by a left atrial appendage rupture, pleuropericardial tear, and cardiac herniation through the pericardium [40]. Moreover, case reports have described the ability of CT chest with IV contrast to detect enhancement defect in the myocardium suggestive of myocardial infarction and ventricular septal defect in the setting of trauma that triggered further imaging and intervention [6,21,41].…”
Section: Discussion Of Procedures By Variant Variant 1: Suspected Carmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition, another case report described a patient with a hemothorax caused by a left atrial appendage rupture, pleuropericardial tear, and cardiac herniation through the pericardium [40]. Moreover, case reports have described the ability of CT chest with IV contrast to detect enhancement defect in the myocardium suggestive of myocardial infarction and ventricular septal defect in the setting of trauma that triggered further imaging and intervention [6,21,41].…”
Section: Discussion Of Procedures By Variant Variant 1: Suspected Carmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are no data regarding the use of MRI heart in the setting of blunt chest trauma and suspected cardiac injury. A few case reports describe the use of cardiac MR (CMR) in detecting viable myocardium using late gadolinium enhancement because of myocardial infarction in trauma patients [41,46] and a case report describing a heart herniation [48]. CMR is also useful for detecting cardiac injuries, particularly right ventricular injury and pericardial injury, quantifying valvular regurgitation, and detecting typical or atypical aortic dissection in patients.…”
Section: Discussion Of Procedures By Variant Variant 1: Suspected Carmentioning
confidence: 99%