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Connie Tsao Non-invasive Conference April 7, 2010. Cardiac Masses. Outline. Non-tumors Normal Variants Catheters Thrombotic disease Infective endocarditis Cardiac tumors Epidemiology Clinical Manifestations Primary Cardiac Tumors Benign Malignant Metastatic Tumors. Non-tumors.
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Connie Tsao Non-invasive Conference April 7, 2010 Cardiac Masses
Outline • Non-tumors • Normal Variants • Catheters • Thrombotic disease • Infective endocarditis • Cardiac tumors • Epidemiology • Clinical Manifestations • Primary Cardiac Tumors • Benign • Malignant • Metastatic Tumors
Normal Variants • Structural variants • False tendon: fibrous/fibromuscular • Eustachian valve • Chiari network • Prosthetic material • Catheters • Pacing wires • Cardiac assist devices
Arrhythmogenic potential? • Series of 15 patients with idiopathic LV tachycardia vs. controls referred for echo • All ILVT had false tendon from IL wall-septum • 2/3 of these >2 mm • 34/671 (5%) of controls had false tendon • Oriented across LV • <2 mm Thakur RK, Circ 1996
Epidemiology • In FHS Original and Offspring cohort: 101 participants with LV false tendons (2% of population) Kenchaiah S et al, JASE 2009
Associated with: • Lower BMI • Innocent murmur • ECG-LVH • Not associated with ventricular ectopy, or other ECG abnormalities • No excess mortality in 7.7±1.6 yrs follow-up Kenchaiah S et al, JASE 2009
Persistent Eustachian valve • Case reports of association between Eustachian valve and PFO • In 306 pts referred for TEE (211 for cryptogenic CVA): • 143/211 (68%) of cryptogenic stroke group had EV • 31/95 (33%) of controls had EV • 70% of pts with EV had PFO • ? Effect of flow on increasing patency of PFO Strotmann JM, Heart 2001 Schuchlenz HW, JASE 2004
Chiari Network • Hans Chiari, 1897: 11 pts, fibrous network in RA • Remnant of right valve of sinus venosus • Directed IVC flow through fossa ovalis to LA • Incomplete resorption • 1-4% in autopsy studies
Chiari network and PFO • 1436 pts consecutive pts referred for TEE • Prevalence 29/1436 (2%) • Chiari network present in: • 24/522 (4.6%) referred for paradoxical embolus • 5/913 (0.5%) controls • PFO present in: • 24/29 (83%) with Chiari • 44/160 (28%) controls • Significant R-L shunt by agitated saline in 1/3 with Chiari Schneider B, et al, JACC 1995
Intracardiac Thrombi • Accounts for 15-20% strokes • Major source: LA thrombi (>45% cases) • LA thrombi detected by TEE: • Acute AF: 14% • Chronic AF: 27% • AF with clinical thromboembolism: 43% • Other: Aorta, valve prostheses, inter-atrial septum aneurysm • LV thrombi • Post-MI • Significant LV dysfunction • Stoddard MF et al, JACC 1995; Manning WJ et al, Ann Int Med 1995
LV Thrombus: Value of LGE-CMR • 784 consecutive pts with LVEF <50% • Thrombus detection: • 37 (4.7%) by cine-CMR • 55 (7%) by LGE-CMR • Pathologic correlation in 8 pts, LV thrombus in 5 • All 5 detected by LGE-CMR • 2 detected by cine-CMR • Cine CMR missed small intracavity and mural thrombi Weinsaft JW et al, JACC 2008
LV Thrombus: Contrast Echo vs CMR • 121 pts post MI or clinical heart failure TTE, contrast-TTE, LGE-CMR • LV thrombus in 24 pts by LGE-CMR • Larger infarcts, aneurysm, lower LVEF • TTE sensitivity 33%, Contrast TTE: 61% • Low LVEF predictor of thrombus detection by CMR • Thrombi detected by DE-CMR vs contrast echo: mural, small apical • Close agreement with contrast echo (k=0.79) Weinsaft JW et al, JACC Imaging 2009
Asymptomatic 50 year old man SSFP First pass perfusion Hoey ED et al, Clin Radiol 2009
Primary cardiac tumors • Majority (>75%) are benign • Rare; incidence of <0.001-0.03% in autopsy studies
Classic Triad of Symptoms • Intracardiac obstruction: • Dyspnea, orthopnea, pulmonary edema • Presyncope/syncope • Angina, claudication • Systemic embolization: • CVA, retinal artery emboli • Emboli to extremities • Constitutional symptoms: fever, fatigue, weight loss, arthalgia
Myxoma • Mean age 50 years at diagnosis • F>M (60-70%) • 80% in left atrium, 15% in right atrium • Can occur in ventricles • 90% solitary, 7% Carney complex • Average size 5-6 cm • Attachment to fossa ovalis
Pedunculated, gelatinous • Friable/villous surface (1/3) emboli • Histology: • Mesenchymal cells in mucopolysaccharide stroma • Production of VEGF angiogenesis
Clinical manifestations • Factors: size, anatomic location • Pulmonary venous or mitral valve obstruction • Stroke/neurologic deficits • Systemic embolization • Constitutional symptoms: fever, weight loss • Anemia, elevated ESR, leukocytosis • ↑IL-6, inflammatory factors
Imaging • Echo • Prolapsing mass across MV/TV • Identification of point of attachment • CMR • Heterogeneous appearance on T1W, T2W images • Patchy LGE • CT • Low attenuation mass, no enhancement • Calcification in 10-15%
Treatment • Resection • Including surrounding septum at attachment • Surgical mortality <5% • Risk for atrial arrhythmias • Recurrence in 2-5% • Recurrence in Carney complex 12-22%
Papillary Fibroelastoma • Incidence 0.002-0.33% in autopsies • Mean age 60 years • Mean size 9 mm (2-70 mm) • 80-90% on valvularendocardium, AV 36%> MV 29%> TV 11% > PV 7% • Downstream side • Histology: fibromyxoid core, rim of elastic fibers covered by endothelial cells • Distinction from Lambl’s excrescence
Clinical manifestations • Embolization: tumor or thrombus • CVA/TIA • PE • Peripheral embolization • MI, angina • Sudden cardiac death • Syncope • 1/3 of patients asymptomatic
Imaging • TTE can miss due to size • CMR not ideal due to high mobility • Well-circumscribed nodule on T1W, T2W • LGE reported • Distinction from vegetation • No significant valvular regurgitation • Location away from valvular free edge
29 year old woman with incidentally discovered mass… Parthenakis F et al, Cardiovasc Ultrasound 2009