Abstract
The close proximity of the esophagus to the thoracic aorta provides an excellent imaging opportunity. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) serves an important role in several important pathologies including aortic dissection, aortic aneurysms, aortic atheromatous disease, and aortic trauma. A thorough understanding of the use of TEE in evaluating the thoracic aorta including normal and pathologic presentations is essential to the basic perioperative echocardiographer. However, knowledge of the limitations of the modality is also key to appropriate patient management and preventing mismanagement.
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Midesophageal aortic valve long axis view with the probe slightly withdrawn to demonstrate more of the tubular ascending aorta (M4V 1,439 KB)
Midesophageal view of ascending aorta developed by a slow withdrawal of the probe from an aortic valve short axis (M4V 641 KB)
Upper esophageal aortic arch short axis view in a patient with an acute aortic arch dissection (M4V 1,380 KB)
Midesophageal ascending aortic short axis view in a patient with an ascending aortic dissection (M4V 738 KB)
Midesophageal ascending aortic short axis view in a patient with a side lobe artifact. The linear density in the ascending aorta may be confused with an aortic dissection (AVI 2,544 KB)
Midesophageal ascending aortic long axis view of the same patient. The side lobe artifact may be confused for an aortic dissection (AVI 2,678 KB)
Descending thoracic aortic short axis view in a patient with an aortic dissection. Note the large left sided pleural effusion (MP4 912 KB)
Descending thoracic aortic short axis view with color flow Doppler in a separate patient with an aortic dissection. Note the laminar flow in the true lumen and the red arrow indicates the false lumen with sluggish flow (MP4 412 KB)
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Midesophageal aortic valve long axis view in a patient with an ascending aortic dissection (M4V 257 KB)
Midesophageal aortic valve long axis view in a separate patient with an ascending aortic dissection. Note the intimal tear with diastolic flow reversing back into the true lumen from the false lumen (M4V 781 KB)
Descending thoracic aortic short axis view with color flow Doppler in a patient with an aortic dissection and a large left pleural effusion (M4V 758 KB)
Midesophageal aortic valve long axis view in a patient with an ascending aortic dissection (M4V 926 KB)
Midesophageal aortic valve short axis view in the same patient. The intimal flap is located abutted the right coronary ostium (M4V 952 KB)
Midesophageal aortic valve short axis view in a patient with a bicuspid valve and ascending aortic aneurysm. Note the dilated annulus (M4V 907 KB)
Midesophageal aortic valve short axis view with color flow Doppler in a patient with an ascending aortic aneurysm (M4V 738 KB)
Descending thoracic aortic short axis view demonstrating complex atheromatous disease (M4V 481 KB)
Descending thoracic aortic long axis view of the same patient (M4V 436 KB)
Video 10.7a
Midesophageal aortic valve long axis view in a patient with an ascending aortic dissection (M4V 257 KB)
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Maus, T.M. (2016). Thoracic Aorta. In: Maus, T., Nhieu, S., Herway, S. (eds) Essential Echocardiography. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-34124-8_10
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-34124-8_10
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