Radiology Case Reports (Mar 2022)

From cold-blooded reptiles to embryological remnants: Persistent myocardial sinusoids

  • David Jean Winkel, MD,
  • Julian Gehweiler, MD,
  • Gregor Sommer, MD,
  • Jens Bremerich,
  • Michael J Zellweger, MD,
  • Philip Haaf, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
pp. 521 – 524

Abstract

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In nature, basically 2 types of myocardial vascular patterns exist: the sinusoidal and the coronary type. In the sinusoidal type, the sinusoid is completely fed by blood coming directly from the ventricle through a spongy sinusoidal network. This pattern is found in cold-blooded animals and in the early embryologic development of human (warm-blooded) hearts. A 61-year-old man with atrial fibrillation developed severe tachymyopathy with a severely reduced left-ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of 20%. The patient had no history of prior heart surgery or other cardiac interventions. He was referred for a computed tomography (CT) scan for assessment of pulmonary vein anatomy prior to their isolation. Incidentally, a focal myocardial defect of the midventricular infero-septal wall with tail-like extension into the right ventricular cavity was detected. In a cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) scan there was no evidence of a myocardial infarction or fibrosis. In the absence of a ventricular septal defect by CT, CMR and echocardiography the diagnosis of a persistent myocardial sinusoid was evident. In this case, we used state-of-the art methods for pathology visualization, illustrating the effectiveness of CT and CMR in the precise detection and differential diagnosis of myocardial anomalies including a multi-coloured 3D-printed model that may further enhance visuospatial appreciation of those anomalies.

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