A single-center, retrospective analysis was conducted of 511 consecutive patients (281 women; mean age, 64.0 ± 18.6 years) with PE confirmed by contrast-enhanced multidetector computed tomography who underwent transthoracic echocardiography for the assessment of left ventricular and RV alterations. The McConnell sign, the “60/60” sign, and right heart thrombus were regarded as TES. RVD included RV free wall hypokinesis and RV to LV end-diastolic ratio > 0.9. Incidental echocardiographic alterations were also reported.
RV enlargement, RV free wall hypokinesis, and interventricular septal flattening were found in 27.4%, 26.6%, and 18.4% of patients, respectively. Tricuspid regurgitation peak systolic gradient > 30 mmHg and pulmonary ejection acceleration time < 80 msec were measured in 46.6% and 37.2% of patients, respectively. RVD was found in 20.0% of patients, while normal RV function was present in 33.4% of patients. The McConnell sign, 60/60 sign, and right heart thrombus were found in 19.8%, 12.9%, 1.8% of subjects, respectively. All 16 hemodynamically unstable patients with PE presented enlarged hypokinetic right ventricle and at least one TES. However, in three of them, RV to LV end-diastolic ratio was <0.9. Incidental abnormalities were found in 9.6% of 364 stable patients with PE without RVD and TES.
Transthoracic echocardiography showed no significant abnormalities suggestive of PE in 71% of patients with PE, while in approximately 10%, transthoracic echocardiography revealed incidental findings. The coexistence of an enlarged hypokinetic right ventricle with the McConnell sign together with the 60/60 sign seems to be the most useful echocardiographic criterion for RVD.