Cardiac > Congenital > Asplenia

Asplenia (Ivemark's syndrome): Bilateral Right-sidedness, Right Isomerism, Heterotaxy syndrome with asplenia

Clinical:

In right isomerism, those structures which are normally seen on the right side of the body are seen on both sides (bilateral right-sidedness) [5]. Patients are generally identified in the newborn or infant period with severe cyanosis and survival beyond one year of age is seen in under 5% of cases (mortality of 80-90% in the first year of life [6]). Males are affected twice as commonly as females [5].Right isomerism is associated with asplenia which occurs in 42% of patients [7].

Asplenia is characterized by:

1- Ambiguous abdominal situs- large transverse liver, midline stomach, and a common gastrointestinal mesentery with malrotation- however, abdominal situs ambiguous may not be evident on plain films in up to 50% of cases [2]. Other abnormalities include gallbladder agenesis, imperforate anus, horseshoe kidney, and posterior urethral valves [5].

2- Bilateral tri-lobed lungs and eparterial bronchi (mainstem bronchi pass over the pulmonary arteries and will be seen anterior to the bronchi on cross sectional images).

3- Splenic agenesis (Absence of the spleen also places these patients are increased risk of infection).

4- Persistent left SVC (bilateral SVC in 72% of cases).

5- Inapparent azygous vein.

6- Severe cardiac defects- Asplenia is almost always associated (94-100% of cases) with severe, complex, and inoperable cardiac malformations. Total anaomalous pulmonary venous drainage (seen in almost 50% of cases), atrioventricular canal, transposition of the great arteries, a large atrial defect or common atrium (75%), anomalies of pulmonary venous return (62.5%), univentricular heart (37.5%), or pulmonary atresia. [6]

7- The presence of Howell-Jolly bodies (senescent RBC's on the peripheral smear due to absent spleen). Absent spleen also results in increased risk for life-threatening infection [5].

X-ray:

There is usually an associated complex congenital heart disease- single atrium with 2 right atrial appendages, pulmonary stenosis or atresia, and total anomalous pulmonary venous return.

REFERENCES:

(1) J Thorac Imag, 1995, 10: p.43-57

(2) Radiology 1973; Freedom RM, et al. Radiographic viseral patterns in the asplenia syndrome. 106: 387-391

(3) Radiographics 1999; Applegate KE, et al. Situs revisited: Imaging of the heterotaxy syndrome. 19: 837-852

(4) Radiographics 2002; Fulcher AS, Turner MA. Abdominal manifestations of situs anomalies in adults. 22: 1439-1456

(5) AJR 2009; Ghosh S, et al. Anomalies of visceroatrial situs. 193: 1107-1117

(6) J Cardiovasc Comput Tomogr 2012; Balan A, et al Atrial isomerism: a pictorial review. 6: 127-136

(7) J Cardiovasc Comput Tomogr 2013; Wolla CD, et al. Cardiovascular manifestations of heterotaxy and related situs abnormalities assessed with CT angiography. 7: 408-416

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