Congenital Absence versus Acquired Attenuation of One Pulmonary Artery
- 1 March 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 31 (3) , 436-447
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.31.3.436
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine means, if any, by which the congenital absence of one pulmonary artery could be distinguished from the physiological and radiological attenuation secondary to chronic unilateral lung disease. It was found early in the study that the lung in agenesis of the pulmonary artery remains more or less normal. Therefore, the bedside and fluoro-scope demonstration of good ventilation on the affected side would differ sharply from the diminished ventilation and rales in cases of unilateral lung disease. Mediastinal swing on fluoroscopy would indicate a greatly diminished ventilation on the side into which the heart moves and incriminates severe lung disease. Cardiac catheterization, angiocardiography and aortography have all been found necessary in difficult cases. These disciplines will demonstrate patency of the pulmonary artery in lung disease and opacification of small narrow branches and 1 or 2 bronchial arteries to the disease lung. However, they will depict complete failure of the catheter to enter the pulmonary artery, no opacification of the branches of the PA and massive systemic collaterals in cases of congenital absence of one pulmonary artery. Notching of the ribs, when present, would indicate markedly well developed intercostal collaterals and would be a strong point in favor or pulmonary artery agenesis.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Clinical Significance of the Pulmonary Collateral CirculationCirculation, 1961
- Congenital absence of a main branch of the pulmonary artery: Report of three new cases associated respectively with bronchiectasis, atrial septal defect and Eisenmenger's complexThe American Journal of Medicine, 1958
- Congenital Absence of Left Pulmonary ArteryBMJ, 1956
- Congenital absence of the left pulmonary arteryAmerican Heart Journal, 1955
- A Case of Unilateral Pulmonary EmphysemaThorax, 1953
- ANGIOCARDIOGRAPHIC STUDY OF THE PULMONARY ARTERYJAMA, 1949
- PULMONARY ATRESIA AND HYPERTROPHY OF THE BRONCHIAL ARTERIESThe Lancet, 1938
- CONGENITAL ABSENCE OF THE RIGHT PULMONARY ARTERY IN A NEW-BORN INFANTAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1937
- THE EFFECT OF THE LIGATION OF THE PULMONARY ARTERY OF ONE LUNG WITHOUT AND WITH RESECTION OF THE PHRENIC NERVEArchives of Surgery, 1926
- The morphology of the pulmonary artery in the mammaliaThe Anatomical Record, 1919