Varianten der Pulmonalvenen
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/upload.wikimedia.org/4/9/5/8/8/Scimitar_syndrome_chest_CT_thumb.jpg)
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/1/000001_thumb.jpg)
Bilateral
wandering inferior pulmonary veins. Posterioanterior view
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/3/000003_thumb.jpg)
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/4/000004_thumb.jpg)
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/6/000009_thumb.jpg)
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/7/000005_thumb.jpg)
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/8/000006_thumb.jpg)
Bilateral
wandering inferior pulmonary veins. 3D reconstruction of pulmonary venous tree. Anterior view.
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/www.eurorad.org/9/8/8/4/9/000007_thumb.jpg)
Bilateral
wandering inferior pulmonary veins. 3D reconstruction of pulmonary venous tree. Posterior oblique view
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/data.pacs.de/1/3/1/0/0/8/13244_2018_659_Fig11_HTML_thumb.jpg)
Pictorial
review of the pulmonary vasculature: from arteries to veins. Pulmonary venous variant. a Three-dimensional reconstruction of a contrast-enhanced CT shows normal pulmonary venous anatomy with two right and two left pulmonary veins draining into the left atrium. b Axial CT image showing the most common variant of pulmonary venous anatomy, a fusion of the left pulmonary veins prior to entry in the left atrium (*). c Three-dimensional reconstruction shows a fusion of the left superior and inferior pulmonary veins with a shared ostium (*)
![](https://pacs.de/sites/default/files/pictures/thumbs/data.pacs.de/9/7/4/7/4/13256_2014_Article_2897_Fig1_HTML_thumb.jpg)
Correction of
the scimitar syndrome, a rare cardiac venous anomaly, leading to Budd–Chiari syndrome: a case report. Scimitar sign. Coronal contrast-enhanced computed tomography shows the anomalous drainage of the right pulmonary vein into the inferior vena cava, representing the scimitar sign on conventional radiography.
![](/sites/all/modules/pacs/tools/imgs/Iris_color_40.png)