Retroaortic coronary course
A retroaortic course refers to a coronary artery taking its route posteriorly between the non-coronary sinus and the interatrial septum and is considered as a ‘benign anomalous course’.
Epidemiology
Associations
Clinical conditions associated with a retroaortic course of a coronary artery include :
- other congenital coronary artery anomalies
- ectopic origin of the left main coronary artery
- ectopic origin of the circumflex artery
- single coronary artery
- other forms of congenital heart disease
Clinical presentation
Similar to a prepulmonic anomalous coronary artery course, a retroaortic course is thought to not be of increased hemodynamic risk and will be most probably found as an incidental finding on invasive coronary angiography (ICA), cardiac CT or cardiac MRI.
Radiographic features
A retroaortic coronary artery course is usually associated with an ectopic origin of either the left main coronary artery or left circumflex artery from the right coronary sinus or the right coronary artery. It supplies the left coronary or circumflex territory and can be visualized on invasive coronary angiography (ICA) coronary CTA or coronary MR angiography as a major coronary artery coursing posterior to the aortic root, where normally no major coronary arteries are found andy .
Radiology report
The radiology report should include a description of the following features:
- right coronary artery origin, course, segments
- circumflex artery with course, branches, and segments
- left main coronary artery origin and variant anatomy
- left anterior descending artery with course branches and segments
- coronary artery disease and stenoses with location based on the AHA coronary artery segment model
Treatment and prognosis
A retroaortic course is considered benign and not of hemodynamic importance. Management will entirely depend on symptoms and on associated findings. However, it can complicate aortic valve surgery .