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Extremely rapid growth of a left atrial myxoma

International Journal of Case Reports and Images(2021)

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Abstract
A 56-year-old lady presented to the Accident and Emergency department with worsening shortness of breath, decreased exercise tolerance, orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, and recurrent dizzy spells. Symptoms had been persistent in the last one month but worsened over the last two weeks prior to presentation. She is a professional horse rider/trainer and has had multiple trauma to her hip following falls over the past 17 years. Her medical history includes previous small left cerebellar infarct 10 years ago, asthma, previous multiple trauma to the hip with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) to the pelvis and right hip replacement, awaiting left total hip replacement, spondylolisthesis L5/S1, previous pulmonary embolism two years prior, previous fall from a horse resulting in fractured clavicle (ORIF right clavicle) and ribs two years prior, lifetime non-smoker. She has had multiple computed tomography (CT) scans for these reasons which were available for comparison (Video1). At presentation, she was dyspneic at rest (NYHA IV) and tachycardic, bilateral crepitations with a soft mid diastolic murmur at the cardiac apex. D-dimer was 1407 ng/mL, with a mild Troponin T rise of 17 ng/L. Emergency department suspected pulmonary embolism and an urgent computed tomography pulmonary angiogram (CTPA) revealed a large filling defect in the left atrium (LA) measuring 6.2 cm by 4.2 cm (Figure 1). She was reviewed by the cardiologist and trans-thoracic echocardiogram confirmed a large mobile mass in the LA measuring 7.67 cm by 3.46 cm. The mass was attached to the left superior pulmonary vein area, plunged into the left ventricle obstructing the mitral orifice in diastole. Right ventricle was dilated with preserved function (Figure 2) (Video2). Her brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) was 4269 pg/mL. She was managed for decompensated heart failure due to obstructive atrial myxoma, commenced on diuretics, anticoagulation, and urgent referral made to the on-call cardiac surgeon. Based on the acute clinical condition and symptoms (frequent dizzy episodes) she was prioritized for out of hours emergency surgery. On induction, she became bradycardic and hypotensive (peri-arrest) but recovered after placing in a Trendelenburg position with right lateral rotation. The rest of the surgery was uneventful. Median sternotomy, bi-caval cannulation, and cardioplegic arrest was performed. Trans-septal approach was used; a large mass was noted, attached by a 2 cm wide base to the back of the LA between the left pulmonary veins; the mass was excised (Figure 3). No patch was required. The mitral valve was normal. The procedure was completed as per routine. Her post-operative course was uneventful. Histology confirmed a left atrial myxoma. At eight weeks follow-up her breathing had improved and she was back to her normal baseline with excellent exercise tolerance.
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left atrial myxoma
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