Sunday 7 October 2018

Use Both Arms for Bubble Contrast Study in Brain Abscess, Not Just the Right

Subjects with brain abscess without any other risk factors, or relatively young subjects with stroke are often suspected of having a right to left cardiac shunt and undergo a bubble contrast study with agitated saline.

A minority of such subjects have the rarest form of ASD- deroofing of the coronary sinus, accompanied by a left sided superior vena cava (SVC), draining into the coronary sinus. (The coronary sinus collects venous blood from the cardiac muscle and drains into the right atrium, but occasionally, the partition separating the coronary sinus from the left atrium is absent, creating continuity between the coronary sinus and left atrium. Such subjects usually have a left sided SVC, draining into the coronary sinus).

Under such subjects, bubble contrast injected only into the right arm will bypass the left sided sided SVC and will therefore appear in the right atrium long before the left atrium, suggesting an absence of shunt. On the other hand, bubble contrast injected into the left arm will traverse the left subclavian vein and make its way into the left sided SVC, the deroofed coronary sinus and will thus appear immediately in the left atrium, revealing the shunt and thus the cause for the putative brain abscess or stroke.

Persistent left sided SVC is rare, but is still the commonest venous anomaly, affecting 0.3% of subjects in the general population and 10% of subjects with congenital heart disease.

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