We present a case of right atrial myxoma in a patient who presented with syncope.
Fig 1: Two-dimensional echocardiography showing a 48 mm right intra-atrial tumor.
During operation and cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated cannulation into the aorta and retrograde femoral vein and superior vena caval canulation. Tumor was not palpated from the outside of right atrium. Swan-Ganz catheter was not introduced. Surgical exploration of the right atrium revealed 6.5x5.5x4.5 cm dull, purplish mass attached to the interatrial septum (Fig. 2). The mass was excised totally in an attentive and successful manner. Histologic examination of the mass confirmed the diagnosis of cardiac myxoma (Fig. 3). The patient recovered without any complication.
Fig 2: Macroscopic view of the operative speciment. It is round, firm, and encapsulated.
Special attention had to be shown during caval or femoral vein cannulation, avoiding excessive manipulation of the heart during the surgery, and placing crossclamp on main pulmonary artery. In our case, pulmonary embolism did not develop before and after the surgery. Patients pulmonary pressure was normal after the surgery.
Surgical removal of the myxoma is the treatment of choice and is usually curative. The patient remained asymptomatic till postoperative eight months without any echocardiographic signs of recurrence.
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