8 research outputs found

    P884 Rare case of primary cardiac lymphoma in immunocompetent patient

    Full text link
    Abstract Primary cardiac lymphoma is a rare tumour especially in immunocompetent person. It is invariably fatal unless diagnosed and treated early. Our patient was a 76 year old Chinese gentlemen, known case diabetes mellitus and hypertension, who presented with 3 months history of failure symptoms. He also had loss of appetite. His vital signs were stable. There was bibasal crepitation, raised JVP with normal heart sounds and bilateral pedal edema. Chest X-ray showed bilateral pleural effusion.He was admitted for stabilization of heart failure and started on diuretics. Echocardiography showed the LV ejection fraction was 50% with grade 1 diastolic dysfunction. There was a global pericardial effusion with effusion size 2.52cm maximum at posterior to LV. There was partial RA collapse .Patient was otherwise hemodynamically stable. Patient was observed closely and diuretics continued. Echocardiography on the third day of admission showed a suspicious looking mass in the right atrial (RA) and right ventricular (RV) wall near the AV groove. It become apparent after pericardial effusion became less. Patient was counselled and agreed for pericardial tapping but procedure had to be abandoned as effusion has reduced compared to before (&amp;lt;20mm). MRI cardiac showed an infiltrating mass around the right atrio-ventricular groove extending to the right ventricular free wall and around the pericardial lining around the ascending aorta and pulmonary trunks. There is inhomogenous signal in STIR with iso-intensity on T1 weighted images. First pass metabolism revealed some vascularity. There was a patchy myocardial enhancement on late gadolinium enhancement. pericardium was thickened with global pericardial effusion- 16mm. Large right pleural effusion seen and minimal left pleural effusion. Mediastinal lymphadenopathy was seen. The finding were suggestive of cardiac lymphoma with differential sarcoma. Subsequent day, patient develop acute ischemic stroke which was complicated by aspiration pneumonia and septic shock. Fortunately he recovered after 1 week of antibiotics and non-invasive ventilatory support. FDG PET- CT scan showed FDG-avid primary cardiac lymphoma with pericardial involvement and conglomerate of multiple group of mediastinal and supra clavicular lymph nodes . Bilateral hypermetabolic adrenal nodule were seen but unable to determine its relevance to the primary pathology(lymphoma). No marrow or other organ involvement. Stage is likely IIE. We were unable to harvest the lymph node because they were too deep. Patient"s family was counselled for cardiac biopsy but family did not want to take the risk as patient was bedridden and fragile. They were also not keen for any chemotherapy or invasive procedure. Once patient was out of infection, they requested to bring back patient to home. He was sent to nursing home for full time care but succumbed to another bout of aspiration pneumonia one week after discharge. Abstract P884 Figure. Echo, MRI, Pet CT scan</jats:p

    P1342 Secondary cardiac tumour -a metastasis from renal cell carcinoma via transvenous extension

    Full text link
    Abstract Secondary cardiac tumour is 20-40 times more common than primary cardiac tumour. Most common tumour that metastasize to the heart are lung cancer, breast cancer and hematologic malignancy. Melanoma and pleural mesothelioma has high inclination to metastasize. Other cancer with high rate of cardiac metastasis include gastric, ovarian, renal and pancreatic cancer. The presentation of cardiac metastasis is usually non-specific and sometimes mimic other cardiac condition. We would like to present one such case where we used multimodality approach for proper evaluation. A 57 year old lady presented with intermittent chest discomfort for one month which worsen on day of admission. Otherwise she had good effort tolerance. Electrocardiogram had no acute ischemic changes and Troponin T was not elevated. Bedside echocardiography revealed a large cardiac mass in right atrium around 66mm x 29mm, protruding to right ventricle. Apart from that noted aneurysm of interatrial septum towards LA. MRI cardiac showed an inhomogenous mass extending from the right renal vein and inferior vena cava(IVC) into the right atrium(RA). The tumour mass in the right atrium a highly mobile and flops across the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle during ventricular diastole causing right ventricular outflow tract obstruction. The mass was hyperintense on T2- and isointense on T1-weighted images. There was vascularity within the mass with inhomogenous gadolinium enhancement. There was also 2 masses in right kidney , a larger inhomogenous encapsulated mass at the right lower pole and smaller at lower pole. The findings were suggestive of a primary renal cell carcinoma with tumour mass extension into right renal vein, inferior vena cava and into the right atrium. A staging CT scan thorax , abdomen and pelvis did not show any other possible primary source of cancer and reconfirm the extracardiac finding of the MRI. No evidence of tumour extension into hepatic veins and left renal vein. There was however small nodular opacities in both right and left lung suggesting lung metastasis. A combined operation was done with our cardiothoracic surgeon and urologist from nearby tertiery hospital. Nephrectomy and removal of tumour thrombus from IVC and RA was done with 18 degree Celcius circulatory arrest with cardiopulmonary bypass. Section of renal mass showed a poorly circumscribed lobulated tumour with areas of hemorrhage and necrosis. The tumour was close to capsule but has not breached it. The tumour was mainly clear cell carcinoma variant, nuclear grade III. Section from IVC that extend to RA appeared elongated sausage-like measuring 150mm in length and 30mm in diameter had tumour embolus. Pulmonary artery and perirenal blood vessel also had tumour emboli. The hilar nodes however were free from tumour. Patient recovered well and was discharged home day 9 post operation. Follow-up echocardiogram 3weeks post-op showed no recurrence of the mass and good LV function. Abstract P1342 Figure. Echo, CTscan, MRI and Pathology images</jats:p
    corecore