Abstract

Primary cardiac sarcomas are rare. A 63-year-old woman presented with progressive symptoms of fatigue, palpitations, and dyspnea. Transthoracic echocardiography detected a mass in the left atrium, fixed and probably attached to the interatrial septum suggestive of myxoma. Transesophageal echocardiography confirmed the existence of a large lobulated mass in the left atrium measuring 45mm×25mm in diameter. Subsequent cardiac magnetic resonance imaging showed a mass of heterogeneous appearance, with broad base of implantation on the posterior wall of the left atrium. The extension study with multidetector computed tomography showed superficial infiltration of the atrial wall, without involvement of the mitral valve or pulmonary veins and no extension to other extracardiac structures. The patient underwent surgery resecting a bilobed mass, smooth and yellowish, strongly attached to the posterior wall of left atrium. The pathologic study was consistent with the diagnosis of myxofibrosarcoma.<Learning objective: Primary cardiac tumors are among the most challenging disease entities to diagnose because of their rarity and highly variable and usually nonspecific clinical presentation. Although the definitive diagnosis of a cardiac tumor, whether benign or malignant and the tumor type is provided by histological examination, imaging techniques are essential for confirming the existence of a cardiac mass and characterizing the tumor before obtaining a sample for pathologic examination.>

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