Circulation, Vol 53, 280-285, Copyright © 1976 by American Heart Association
DS Hirschfeld and N Schiller
Nine patients with anatomically documented vegetations on one or more cusps
of the aortic valve had echocardiograms in which abnormal echoes were
associated with the aortic leaflet echoes. The motion of the abnormal
echoes during systole correlated well with the anatomic location of
vegetations: a vegetation on the right coronary cusp moved anteriorly with
systole while a vegetation on the noncoronary cusp moved posteriorly during
systole. Our data, although inconclusive, suggest that echoes from a
vegetation on the left coronary cusp maintain a mid-aortic position
throughout the cardiac cycle. The echocardiographic appearance of
vegetations is not specific, but in the setting of septicemia, dense mobile
echoes in the region of the aortic valve are strongly suggestive of
vegetation. A normal echocardiographic appearance of the aortic valve does
not exclude the possibility that vegetation is present, especially if the
growth is less than 5 mm in size.
ARTICLES
Localization of aortic valve vegetations by echocardiography
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