| Literature DB >> 27071931 |
K Hirschberg1, F Wiedmann2, E Zitron2, P Fortner2, J H Riffel2, E Chorianopoulos2, G Gdynia3, G Mechtersheimer3, M Andrassy4, G Szabó5, R Arif5, H A Katus2, S J Buss2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary cardiac tumors are rare and often asymptomatic or present with unspecific symptoms. Benign cardiac tumors of vascular origin are especially rare, with only few existing data in the literature. CASEEntities:
Keywords: CMR; Cardiac tumor; Echocardiography; Intracardiac angioma
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27071931 PMCID: PMC4830042 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-016-0860-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Results from a 12-lead electrocardiogram of the patient showing T-wave inversion in the inferior and precordial leads
Fig. 2Apical four-chamber view (a) and subcostal four-chamber view (b) echocardiogram showing a large and homogenous mass in the right ventricle and pericardial effusion
Fig. 3T1-weighted (a) and T2-weighted (b) images and late gadolinium enhancement (c) on cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
Fig. 4Myocardial biopsy through partial inferior sternotomy
Fig. 5Left circumflex artery (b) and right coronary artery (a) with connection to the tumor showing a characteristic tumor blush
Fig. 6Hematoxylin and eosin stain (a and b, magnification 100×) showing the intracardiac angioma consisting of vessels (v), adipose tissue (at), collagen (c) and myocardial cells (mc). Elastic van Gieson stain (c, magnification 100× and d, magnification 200×) confirms the presence of arterioles (a) in the tumor. Strong positivity for CD31 (e, magnification 100×) and CD34 (f, magnification 100×) supported the vascular origin of this tumor