Abstract

A three-month-old male infant presented to the Royal Hospital, Muscat, Oman in April 2014 following two episodes of pneumonia. On presentation, the patient was not dysmorphic; however, he was tachycardic and tachypnoeic with severe respiratory distress. A pansystolic murmur was heard in his apex, radiating to the axilla. A chest examination showed bilateral wheezing and scattered crepitations. An abdominal examination revealed a soft abdomen with hepatomegaly (liver span of 12 cm), situated 4 cm below the right costal margin. Echocardiography and an angiographic volume-rendered reconstructed computed tomograph showed a giant left atrium measuring 7.4 × 4.7 cm [Figure 1]. The atrium had severe mitral valve regurgitation from poor coaptation of the mitral valve leaflets due to annulus dilation of 22 mm. The mitral valve apparatus and left atrial appendage were normal, excluding the associated left atrial appendage aneurysm. There was mild tricuspid valve regurgitation with a peak gradient of 90 mmHg (systemic blood pressure: 80/55 mmHg), indicating severe pulmonary hypertension. The left ventricle was moderately dilated—the left ventricular posterior wall dimension in diastole was 4 mm; the interventricular septum dimension in diastole was 4 mm; the left ventricular end diastolic dimension was 40 mm; and the left ventricular end systolic dimension was 18 mm. Normal ventricular systolic function was noted (ejection fraction: 62%). The right ventricle was compressed by the dilated left ventricle, with severe compression of the right atrium secondary to the dilated left atrium. The inferior vena cava and hepatic veins were dilated; however, the superior vena cava was compressed by the dilated left atrium with a mean gradient of 8 mmHg at its midportion. The dilated pulmonary veins drained normally to the left atrium. No intracardiac vegetation or thrombi were seen. These findings were confirmed by cardiac computed tomography (CT) angiography; severe compression of the left main bronchus was also observed [Figure 2]. The CT angiography also revealed a left atrial volume of 84 mL compared to a left ventricular volume of 10 mL. A chest radiograph of the infant revealed a persistent left-sided lung opacity [Figure 3]. Further abdominal ultrasonography and CT findings indicated eventration of the left hemidiaphragm with a raised spleen position corresponding to the opaque shadow seen on the chest radiograph. A diagnosis of a congenital giant left atrium (CGLA) was made. Figure 1A & B: A: Four chamber echocardiograph showing a giant congenital left atrium (white arrow) severely compressing the right atrium (red arrow) in a three-month-old male infant. B: Volume-rendered reconstructed computed tomography angiograph showing the giant ... Figure 2A & B: A: Axial computed tomography (CT) angiograph showing a giant congenital left atrium (black arrow) with left upper lobe and segmental right lower lobe atelectasis (red arrows) in a three-month-old male infant. B: Maximum-intensity CT angiograph projection ... Figure 3: Frontal chest radiograph of a three-month-old male infant with congenital giant left atrium showing a persistent left-sided lung opacity (arrow). This was determined by ultrasonography and computed tomography to be a raised spleen caused by eventration ... Despite cardiac anti-failure medications and inotropic support, a high-risk operation was performed to repair the mitral valve due to the cardiac findings and prolonged intubation. A posterior annuloplasty and a posterior left atrial wall excision were also carried out concurrently. The diagnosis of CGLA was confirmed during the course of the surgery. Following the operation, the left atrial dilation improved and the right ventricular systolic pressure decreased to 30 mmHg (estimated from the tricuspid valve regurgitation jet). Unfortunately, the moderate mitral valve regurgitation continued postoperatively and the infant died two weeks later due to severe cardiorespiratory compromise.

Highlights

  • A33-year-old Spanish male presented to the Department of Dermatology & Venereology at the Virgen de las Nieves Hospital, Granada, Spain, in February 2015 with pruritic skin lesions located over a tattoo on his right arm

  • The patient was diagnosed with molluscum contagiosum (MC) and treated with curettage, with a subsequent healing time of three weeks

  • MC is an infection caused by a virus of the Poxviridae family; it occurs commonly in children only occasionally in adults.[1,2]

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Summary

Introduction

B: Dermoscopic image showing the umbilicated papules occurring on the inked lines of the tattoo. A33-year-old Spanish male presented to the Department of Dermatology & Venereology at the Virgen de las Nieves Hospital, Granada, Spain, in February 2015 with pruritic skin lesions located over a tattoo on his right arm.

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