Aortic Anomalies
Right
Aortic Arch

Right aortic arch with aberrant left subclavian
artery-Note aortic knob is on the right and the
trachea is displaced
toward the left instead of the right, as in normals. On the lateral
film,
note the trachea is bowed toward by the aberrant left subclavian
artery which passes behind it
-
If there is a mirror-image right aortic arch, then
-
90% will have Tetralogy of Fallot
-
6% with Truncus Arteriosis
-
5% with Tricuspid Atresia
-
If the person has the following lesions, then the
association with a mirror-image arch is
-
Truncus
arteriosis
33%
-
Tetralogy of
Fallot
25%
-
Transposition
10%
-
Tricuspid
atresia
5%
-
VSD
2%
-
Double Aortic Arch
-
General
-
Most common vascular ring
-
Rarely associated with congenital heart disease
-
Caused by persistence of R and L IV branchial
arches
-
Passes on both sides of trachea
-
Joins posteriorly behind esophagus
-
Right arch is larger and higher
-
Left arch is smaller and lower
-
Barium swallow shows bilateral impressions on frontal
view
-
Angiogram is characteristic
-
Clinical
-
Anatomy
-
X-ray Findings
-
Right arch is higher and larger
-
Left arch is lower and smaller
-
Produces reverse S on esophagram on AP
-
On lateral, arches are posterior to esophagus and
anterior to trachea
-
Cervical Aortic Arch