Discussion
Cor triatriatum sinistrum is a rare, congenital cardiac
malformation which occurs in about 0.1-0.4% of all
patients with congenital heart disease. Most cases
are diagnosed in childhood, with adult cases being
extremely rare.[
1,
2] The condition is characterized by
the presence of a fibromuscular membrane dividing the
LA into a superior posterior chamber and an inferior
anterior chamber. The superior chamber receives the
pulmonary venous inflow, and the inferior chamber
contains the left atrial appendage and the mitral valve
orifice.[
3] Communication between the two chambers
usually occurs through a perforation in the membrane.
Loeffler[
4] classified hearts with cor triatriatum into three
subgroups. Type 1 contains no opening in the membrane,
type 2 has a small opening, and type 3 features a large
perforation through the membrane. Classically, patients
present during the neonatal period or early infancy,
although patients with type 3 cor triatriatum may
remain undetected until late adulthood depending on
the diameter of the orifice and the degree of obstruction.
Generally, patients are symptom-free when the diameter is >1 cm. Late presentation of cor triatriatum in advanced
adulthood may be due to either fibrosis or calcification
of the orifice. This can occur with long-standing
turbulent flow through the membrane which can cause
stenosis or with the development of mitral regurgitation
or atrial fibrillation.[
1] The hemodynamic consequences
and symptoms of cor triatriatum resemble those of mitral
stenosis, and various techniques are available to identify
the intraatrial membrane in patients with this anomaly.
Routine cardiac catheterization and angiography have
been proven to be unreliable in differentiating cor
triatriatum from other causes of left atrial inflow
obstruction. Standard transthoracic echocardiography in
adults also has its limitations in the imaging of posterior
structures; hence, it may not allow for the complete
characterization of the membrane or the flow across the
orifice in the membrane. However, color flow Doppler
US can depict abnormal flow across the membrane
opening. A transesophageal echocardiogram is useful in
determining the difference between intracardiac causes,
such as supravalvular mitral ring, dissected LA, atrial
myxoma, or thrombus, and extra-cardiac causes, such
as mediastinal, pericardial, or a pleural cyst causing
left atrial compression. Additional techniques for
visualizing the intraatrial membrane include computed
tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),
and three-dimensional echocardiography.[
1,
5] The only
definitive treatment for cor triatriatum is complete
surgical excision of the membrane, and the long-term
results with this procedure are excellent, with 85%
survival rates without recurrence.[
3,
6]
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.