Abstract

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Introduction echocardiography may be the first imaging modality detecting a cardiac mass. Although echocardiography cannot give the histopathology, certain imaging features and adjunctive tools such as contrast echocardiography may aid in the differential diagnosis. Methods: we describe five cardiac masses in which echo-contrast helped to assess the presence or not of vascularization. Panel A shows a left atrial mass attached to the fossa ovalis with a large stalk prolapsing to the mitral inflow. Contrast echocardiography showed late but homogeneous opacification of the mass. Gross pathology confirmed an atrial mixoma. Panel B shows two masses in a patient with non-small cell lung cancer one embedded in the inferior left ventricular wall and the other floating in the left atrium. Administration of echo-contrast showed late and inhomogeneous enhancement of the myocardial mass and absent opacification of the atrial mass suggesting a metastatic infiltration of the myocardium together with an avascular neoplastic thrombus in the left atrium. Panel C shows a multi-lobulated and mobile mass in the right atrium straddling the tricuspid valve. Contrast echocardiography highlighted an inhomogeneous diffusion of the contrast within the mass with a rapid opacification only of its atrial portion. Gross pathology confirmed a recurrent thymoma. Panel D shows an intraventricular mass arising from the interventricular septum with multiple hypoechoic areas in a patient with metastatic carcinoid. Contrast administration showed a very late and mild degree of inhomogeneous enhancement. Conclusion: the echo-contrast allows a good differentiation between vascularized and non-vascularized cardiac masses, providing an important indication to differentiate thrombus from tumor. In those hypervascularized masses the homogeneous or inhomogeneous distribution of the contrast could be an interesting clue that orientates between primary or secondary cardiac tumors. Abstract Figure.

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