Unusual ‘Tick Mark’ Calcification on Chest Radiograph in Rheumatic Heart Disease – CT Imaging Revealing Pericardial Calcification
Published: April 1, 2013 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.7860/JCDR/2013/.2912
Peter George, Archana Kaveri Badekila, Narasimha Hegde, Hadihally Byregowda Suresh
1. Associate Professor, Department of Medicine,
2. Resident, Department of Medicine,
3. Professor, Department of Medicine,
4. Professor, Department of Radiodiagnosis & Imaging,
Father Muller Medical College,
Mangalore, Karnataka, 575002- India.
Correspondence
Dr. Peter George,
Associate Professor, Department of Medicine,
Father Muller Medical College, Father Muller Road,
Mangalore, Karnataka, S -575002, India.
Phone: +91 9845177660, +91 824 2238000
Fax: +91 824 2436352
E-mail: drpetergeorge2002@yahoo.com
The identification and the interpretation of subtle opacities on chest radiographs are challenging for clinicians. At times, especially when they are found incidentally, some opacities may be considered as artefacts or insignificant and they are neglected. In the present case, an unusual ‘tick mark’ - shaped dense opacity was incidentally found over the cardiac shadow, and CT imaging revealed pericardial calcification. Pericardial, valvular and atrial calcifications in rheumatic heart disease have been described in the literature.
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