Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Jun 2022)

Case Report: Unusual Cause of Chest Pain: A Multi-Image Assessment of a Cardiac Mass

  • Javier Serrano-Roman,
  • Santiago Saenz-Ancira,
  • Jose C. Armendariz-Ferrari,
  • Valente Fernandez-Badillo,
  • Enrique Solorzano-Pinot,
  • Adrian Espejel-Guzman,
  • Joaquin Berarducci,
  • Alberto Aranda-Fraustro,
  • Mauricio Garcia-Cardenas,
  • Nilda Espinola-Zavaleta,
  • Nilda Espinola-Zavaleta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.889406
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Myxomas represent the most common benign primary cardiac tumor, they usually grow out of the interatrial septum into the left atrium with a pedunculated base. Intracardiac masses can be found incidentally on imaging studies, but symptomatology may arise secondary to the mass effect, embolization, and valvular function impairment. We present the case of a 75-year-old woman who arrived at the emergency department with atrial fibrillation and NSTEMI segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) secondary to a highly vascularized neoplasm visible by coronary angiography and angiotomography. Scarce reports show high quality multi-imaging assessment of significantly vascularized myxomas with such atypical presentation. High-definition imaging studies played a fundamental role in the surgeon’s management of a mass with a complex neovascularization.

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