Thoracic aortic graft infections are infrequent yet grave complications of cardiovascular surgery. Risk factors include prolonged operative time, postoperative wound infections, and patient-specific risk factors like diabetes or malnutrition (Van Hemelrijck et al., Vessel Plus 6:47, 2022). In postoperative vascular scenarios, it is critical to utilize cross-sectional imaging to detect the presence of a complication, followed by describing the morphology, extent, and ancillary features. FDG-PET/CT can help differentiate between expected postoperative changes and worrisome infection by metabolic activity (FDG uptake). We present an extensive case of ascending aortic graft infection in the setting of ongoing sternal osteomyelitis. CT and PET/CT reveal chronic sternal osteomyelitic changes spreading into the retrosternal soft tissues, and a large intraluminal thrombus in the ascending aortic graft. Small mobile strands propagate toward the right brachiocephalic origin, posing a significant stroke risk. PET/CT confirmed postoperative infection by demonstrating increased FDG uptake.
Keyphrases
- pet ct
- risk factors
- pulmonary artery
- aortic dissection
- positron emission tomography
- patients undergoing
- aortic valve
- left ventricular
- cross sectional
- computed tomography
- type diabetes
- coronary artery
- gene expression
- minimally invasive
- heart failure
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- pet imaging
- magnetic resonance
- image quality
- contrast enhanced
- fluorescence imaging
- brain injury
- single cell
- cerebral ischemia