Title of article :
“Crown of Death”; Corona Mortis, a Common Vascular Variant in Pelvis: Identification at Routine 64-slice CT-Angiography
Author/Authors :
Bhoil, Rohit Department of Radiodiagnosis - IGMC Shimla, India , Aggarwal, Neeti Department of Orthopaedics - IGMC Shimla, India , Aggarwal, Vineet Department of Orthopaedics - IGMC Shimla, India , Surya, Mukesh Department of Radiodiagnosis - IGMC Shimla, India , Sharma, Sanjiv Department of Radiodiagnosis - IGMC Shimla, India , Ajay, Ahluwalia Department of Radiodiagnosis - IGMC Shimla, India , Bhoil, Sabina Department of Cardiac Anesthesia - IGMC Shimla, India , Pratap Singh, Surya Department of Radiodiagnosis - IGMC Shimla, India , Thakur, Manveer Department of Radiodiagnosis - IGMC Shimla, India , Sood, Sidharath Department of Orthopaedics - IGMC Shimla, India
Pages :
6
From page :
193
To page :
198
Abstract :
Objective: To establish the incidence of arterial corona mortis variant in angiographic studies being performed using a 64 slice CT scan machine in a series of patients. Methods: This was a prospective cross-sectional study including 100 consecutive patients undergoing routineclinically indicated, standard protocol, CT-angiography for the abdominal aorta and/or lower limbs using a 64 slice CT scanner. Patients having severe arterial insufficiency (Grade 4 stenosis on CT angiography), pelvic infections and tumours, patients with past pelvic trauma and those who had previous pelvic surgery were excluded from the study. In total 200 hemi-pelvises were evaluated for the presence or absence of corona morti. Results: Overall, we included 100 patients in this series including 67 men and 33 women with mean age of 40.1±2.3 (ranging from 22-74) years. The arterial variant was identified on thin, 0.625-mm-thick images in 24 out of 100 patients studied (unilateral in 20 patients and bilateral in 4 patients; 28 out of 200 hemipelvises evaluated, having an incidence of 14%). We found that the distance of corona mortis artery from the symphysis was significantly greater for women compared to men, both on right (p=0.034) and left sides (p=0.046). Conclusion: Corona mortis may be prospectively identified at contrast-enhanced multidetector CT especially in pelvic trauma patients and help guide subsequent endovascular embolization or surgical interventions.
Keywords :
Pelvic fracture , Trauma , Haemorrhage Vascular , intervention Embolization
Journal title :
Bulletin of Emergency and Trauma
Serial Year :
2020
Record number :
2692267
Link To Document :
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