Heart India (Jan 2023)

Spectrum of intracardiac thrombi in different clinical scenarios at a tertiary care center

  • Digvijay D Nalawade,
  • Susheel Kumar Malani,
  • Ajitkumar Krishna Jadhav,
  • Anish Kumar Khan,
  • Pratik Wadhokar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/heartindia.heartindia_51_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
pp. 157 – 162

Abstract

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Cardiologists frequently encounter intracardiac thrombi in the course of their work. Along with tumor and vegetation, it is one of the most frequent differential diagnoses for intracardiac masses. Cardioembolic stroke patients frequently have intracardiac thrombi in the left ventricle. Although the potential for cerebral emboli persists in a large population of patients with chronic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, the risk of LV thrombus formation is highest during the first 3 months after acute myocardial infarction. The main risk factors for the development of left atrial thrombi are rheumatic valvular disease, especially mitral stenosis and atrial fibrillation. Right heart chamber thrombi may develop in situ or occur when peripheral venous clots that are on their way to the lungs become stuck, leading to acute pulmonary embolism, and their incidence ranges from 4% to 18%. We are presenting five cases that represent a broad range of clinical circumstances involving intracardiac thrombus. When performed during systole and diastole, echocardiography can detect thrombus as a discrete, echo-dense mass with clearly defined borders that is separate from the endocardium. Since dimensions, shape, regularity or irregularity, and homogeneity are all characteristic features that define the embolic risk and therapeutic management, the morphology and structure of thrombi should be carefully assessed.

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