Herein, we present a case of a CAT attached to the mitral valve posterior leaflet causing rather silent symptoms such as dyspnea and fatigue on exertion in the light of literature data.
After bicaval and aortic cannulation, cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated. The left atrium was exposed through a right atriotomy and interatrial septotomy. An immobile calcified mass adjacent to the annular side of the mitral valve posterior leaflet was detected intraoperatively. The mass was excised, and the sticky viscous contents were removed (Figures 2). Due to the involvement of the posterior leaflet, the defect in the leaflet was primarily repaired, after the excision of the mass. Postoperative transthoracic echocardiography demonstrated no cardiac mass left.
Figure 2: The gross appearance of mitral valve and resected calcified amorphous tumor.
Histopathological examination of the mass showed an amorphous eosinophilic hyalinized material along with dense calcification (Figures 3). The patient was discharged without any complication in the postoperative sixth day. She was scheduled for regular follow-up. At 24 months of follow-up, transthoracic echocardiography demonstrated no mitral insufficiency and no recurrence of the tumor.
6] Tumor sizes range from 0.17 to 4 cm in their greatest dimensions with the mean size of 2.8 cm. There is a slight female predominance. In our case, the CAT was detected in the left atrium adjacent to the mitral valve annulus with a size of 1.5¥2 cm.
The clinical presentation, which depends on the location and size of the mass, includes dyspnea, chest pain, syncope, and pulmonary or systemic embolism. Mobile CATs definitely indicate a greater risk of cerebrovascular events or systemic embolism than immobile amorphous tumors.[4]
Surgical excision is recommended, if the lesion is large or symptomatic, and surgery is curative, particularly for pedicled lesions. Postoperative recurrence has rarely been reported, particularly in patients not receiving a complete resection.[6] Therefore, these patients should be kept under follow-up after surgical excision through imaging studies.
In conclusion, cardiac calcified amorphous tumors are non-neoplastic rare cardiac tumors. The exact diagnosis is made based on pathological examination. Surgery is the only treatment option. Follow-up is recommended by imaging studies after surgical treatment due to its recurrence potential.
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
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