Indian Heart Journal (Sep 2016)

A rare case of right ventricular myxoma causing recurrent stroke

  • Prakash Aroor Sarvotham Rao,
  • S.N. Nagendra Prakash,
  • Somanath Vasudev,
  • M. Girish,
  • Arun Srinivas,
  • H.P. Guru Prasad,
  • P. Jayakumar,
  • Venu Gopal Anandaswamy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ihj.2016.05.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. S2
pp. S97 – S101

Abstract

Read online

We present a 62-year-old lady admitted in our hospital with two episodes of acute ischemic stroke about 2 weeks apart. She was evaluated for acute ischemic stroke and was thrombolysed for recent stroke in right MCA territory first time. On further evaluation, she was found to have a RVOT mass. A transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiogram revealed a PFO and a large, 5.1 cm × 2.3 cm, ovoid, well circumscribed, echogenic mass in the right ventricle outflow tract attached by small pedicle to the ventricular side of anterior tricuspid leaflet, partly obstructing the right ventricular outflow tract and protruding through the pulmonic valve during systole. She was scheduled for surgery (right ventricular mass excision and PFO closure) after 3 weeks due to the risk of secondary hemorrhage in the infarcted area following thrombolysis and anticoagulation and so was discharged with medications after full neurologic recovery after about a week of hospital stay. She was readmitted 7 days after discharge, before the scheduled date of surgery with history of weakness of right upper limb, slurred speech and mild breathing difficulty lasting for about 20 min following which she improved slowly (transient ischemic attack). The tumor was completely removed with the stalk using cardiopulmonary bypass support. The histopathological findings confirmed the diagnosis of myxoma.

Keywords