Pulmonary Venous Infarction After Radiofrequency Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation
James G. Ravenel1,2 and
H. Page McAdams1
1
Department of Radiology, Box 3808, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC
27710.
2
Present address: Department of Radiology, Medical University of South
Carolina, P. O. Box 250322, 169 Ashley Ave., Charleston, SC 29425.

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Fig. 1A. Left superior pulmonary vein occlusion and venous infarction
after radiofrequency ablation in 31-year-old man with refractory atrial
fibrillation. Posteroanterior chest radiograph shows heterogeneous left upper
lobe opacities.
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Fig. 1B. Left superior pulmonary vein occlusion and venous infarction
after radiofrequency ablation in 31-year-old man with refractory atrial
fibrillation. Contrast-enhanced CT scans (2.5-mm collimation, lung window)
show scattered ground-glass opacities and focal peripheral consolidation in
left upper lobe consistent with venous infarction. Note thickened interlobular
septa (arrows) visible on C.
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Fig. 1C. Left superior pulmonary vein occlusion and venous infarction
after radiofrequency ablation in 31-year-old man with refractory atrial
fibrillation. Contrast-enhanced CT scans (2.5-mm collimation, lung window)
show scattered ground-glass opacities and focal peripheral consolidation in
left upper lobe consistent with venous infarction. Note thickened interlobular
septa (arrows) visible on C.
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Fig. 1D. Left superior pulmonary vein occlusion and venous infarction
after radiofrequency ablation in 31-year-old man with refractory atrial
fibrillation. Contrast-enhanced CT scan (2.5-mm collimation, mediastinal
windows) shows occlusion of left superior pulmonary vein with soft-tissue
attenuation (open arrow) surrounding expected location of vein and
left-sided pleural thickening. Note contrast material (curved arrow)
in right superior pulmonary vein.
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Copyright © 2002 by the American Roentgen Ray Society.