Primary cardiac tumors have been reported in autopsy series with an incidence rate from 0.001-0.03%, with 75% of these being benign. Half of these benign tumors are myxomas[1] that usually occur between the third and sixth decades of life.[2] The growth speed of myxomas has been sporadically reported. Our case was a 21-year-old male patient who applied to our clinic with the diagnosis of a right atrial mass which had been coincidentally found on a routine examination nine months earlier after open heart surgery for a secundumtype atrial septal defect. Our research indicated that this case is the fastest growing right atrial myxoma in an adult patient detected after surgical atrial septal defect closure, and this finding led us to share this knowledge with the cardiovascular community.
The patient was asymptomatic at the time of admission, and his laboratory findings were within normal limits. His transthoracic echocardiogram revealed a pedunculated, clearly delineated mass of 2.3x2.46 cm in diameter adjoining the superior vena cava.
He was operated on using femoral artery-femoral vein cannulation and a subsequent median sternotomy and selective superior vena cava cannulation. The right atrium was opened carefully after cardiac arrest was maintained with normothermic antegrade blood cardioplegia. We found a 2x3 cm mass attached to the lateral wall of the right atrium with a 2 mm peduncle (Figure 1). The mass was excised from the right atrial wall along with its base. After excision, the tumor dimensions measured 2.3x2.1x1.5 cm, and it was diagnosed as myxoma after histopathological examination.
Figure 1: The surgically exposed myxoma.
The postoperative period was uneventful, and the patient was discharged on the fourth postoperative day. He is currently being followed up in the postoperative 35th month, and no problems have been reported.
Our patient was asymptomatic, and his diagnosis was coincidental but also consequential. Myxomas, when diagnosed, are best cured by surgery and have a very low recurrence rate of only 1-3%.[6]
In the English literature, there are cases of left atrial myxoma recurrences as early as five months after excision for myxoma,[7] de novo left atrial development of myxoma eight months after previous coronary bypass surgery when no evidence of myxoma was present,[8] and de novo right atrial myxoma detection in a child who had been diagnosed with a double outlet right ventricle six months earlier.[9] There is also a report of a patient who was accidentally found to have a right atrial mass that was later diagnosed as myxoma after surgery.[10] The patient had no signs of myxoma a few months previously when she had been treated via the transcatheter method for atrial fibrillation, and she had undergone no previous surgical procedures. In addition, there is a report of a right atrial myxoma that developed four years after patch closure of an atrial septal defect.[11]
In conclusion, we believe that our case is the first adult patient who rapidly developed a right atrial myxoma nine months after open heart surgery for an atrial septal defect. We hope that sharing this information will benefit the medical community at large and promote further study.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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