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CT-Centered Multimodality Imaging of Arterial Wall Fragility in Acute Aortic Syndromes: A Narrative Review of Imaging Markers and Clinical Implications.

May 22, 2026pubmed logopapers

Authors

Montatore M,Tupputi R,Masino F,Montatore M,Muscogiuri E,Guglielmi G

Affiliations (4)

  • Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Foggia University School of Medicine, Viale L. Pinto 1, 71122 Foggia, Italy.
  • Radiology Unit, "M. Dimiccoli" Hospital, Viale Ippocrate 15, 70051 Barletta, Italy.
  • Department of Electrical Engineering and Electronics, Polytechnic University of Bari, 70125 Bari, Italy.
  • Radiology Unit, "A. Perrino" Hospital, SS 7, 72100 Brindisi, Italy.

Abstract

Arterial wall fragility represents a unifying pathophysiological substrate underlying a broad spectrum of aortic diseases, including aneurysms, dissections, intramural hematoma, penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers, and aortitis. Rather than distinct entities, these conditions increasingly appear as interconnected manifestations of impaired wall integrity and maladaptive vascular remodeling. This narrative review provides a structured overview of the imaging correlates of arterial wall fragility from a CT-centered, multimodality perspective. Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA) remains the first-line imaging modality in acute settings, enabling rapid and comprehensive assessment of vascular anatomy, luminal integrity, and the presence of life-threatening complications. Complementary modalities, including magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasound, contribute additional information on tissue characterization and hemodynamic evaluation in selected stable patients, follow-up settings, or specific clinical scenarios. Across imaging modalities, specific features-such as false lumen patency, intramural hematoma characteristics, ulcer-like projections, aneurysm morphology, and periaortic inflammatory changes-have been reported as markers of wall instability. These imaging-derived findings may provide clinically relevant information beyond traditional diameter-based assessment and support more refined risk stratification. Emerging approaches, including artificial intelligence, radiomics, computational modeling, and advanced MRI techniques, are expanding the role of imaging toward quantitative evaluation. However, their routine clinical implementation still requires standardization and prospective validation. Overall, a CT-centered multimodality imaging strategy may support a more comprehensive assessment of arterial wall fragility and contribute to individualized clinical decision-making in patients with aortic disease.

Topics

Journal ArticleReview

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