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Title: Preliminary experience in the assessment of aortic valve calcification by ECG-gated multislice spiral computed tomography. Author: Koos R, Mahnken AH, Sinha AM, Wildberger JE, Hoffmann R, Kühl HP. Journal: Int J Cardiol; 2005 Jul 10; 102(2):195-200. PubMed ID: 15982484. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The aim was to correlate the degree of valvular calcification in patients with aortic stenosis determined by retrospectively electrocardiogram (ECG)-gated multislice spiral computed tomography with stenosis severity assessed by cardiac catheterization. METHODS: Prospective study on 41 patients (18 men, mean age 71+/-8 years) with aortic stenosis, who underwent four detector row multislice spiral computed tomography and cardiac catheterization. Severity of aortic stenosis was classified by cardiac catheterization. Aortic valve area, peak to peak and mean transvalvular gradients were correlated with the degree of calcification determined by multislice spiral computed tomography. Aortic valve calcification was assessed using aortic Agatston score, aortic mass score and aortic volume score. RESULTS: All measured aortic valve calcification scores were significantly higher in patients with severe aortic stenosis (n=29) than in patients with moderate (n=7) or mild aortic stenosis (n=5, p<0.001). Aortic valve calcification scores correlated significantly with aortic valve area (r=-0.49, p=0.001 for aortic mass score) and with peak to peak (r=0.68, p<0.001) and mean (r=0.60, p<0.001) transvalvular gradients. CONCLUSIONS: Severity of aortic valve calcification assessed by cardiac multislice spiral computed tomography is inversely related to aortic valve area and positively correlated with transvalvular gradients. Based on this preliminary data larger studies should be performed with echocardiography as a reference standard in order to validate this new information and its utility in the clinical management of the patient.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]