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Cardiac myxoma

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 134.192.191.243 (talk) at 22:18, 4 December 2008 (Changed the fact that atrial spetum was said to seperate the two sides of the heart to the two chambers on each side of the heart). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

An atrial myxoma is a non-cancerous tumor in the upper left or right side of the heart. It grows on the wall (atrial septum) that separates the two chambers on each side of the heart.

Causes

A myxoma is a primary heart (cardiac) tumor. This means that the tumor started within the heart. Most heart tumors start somewhere else.

Primary cardiac tumors are rare. Myxomas are the most common type of these rare tumors. About 75% of myxomas occur in the left atrium of the heart, usually beginning in the wall that divides the two upper chambers of the heart. The rest are in the right atrium. Right atrial myxomas are sometimes associated with tricuspid stenosis and atrial fibrillation.

Myxomas are more common in women. About 10% of myxomas are passed down through families (inherited). Such tumors are called familial myxomas. They tend to occur in more than one part of the heart at a time, and often cause symptoms at a younger age than other myxomas.

Symptoms

Symptoms may occur at any time, but most often they accompany a change of body position. Symptoms may include:

  • Shortness of breath with activity
  • Breathing difficulty when lying flat
  • Breathing difficulty when asleep
  • Dizziness
  • Fainting
  • Sensation of feeling your heart beat (palpitations)
  • Chest pain or tightness

The symptoms and signs of left atrial myxomas often mimic mitral stenosis. General symptoms may also be present, such as:

  • Cough
  • Fever
  • Involuntary weight loss
  • General discomfort (malaise)
  • Joint pain
  • Blueness of skin, especially the fingers (Raynaud's phenomenon)
  • Fingers that change color upon pressure or with cold or stress
  • Curvature of nails accompanied with soft tissue enlargement (clubbing) of the fingers
  • Swelling - any part of the body

These general symptoms may also mimic those of infective endocarditis.

Signs and Tests

The health care provider will listen to the heart with stethoscope. A "tumor plop" (a sound related to movement of the tumor), abnormal heart sounds, or murmur may be heard. These sounds may change when the patient changes position.

Right atrial myxomas rarely produce symptoms until they have grown to be at least 13 cm (about 5 inches) wide.

Tests may include:

Blood tests: A CBC may show anemia and increased WBCs (white blood cells). The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is increased.

Treatment

The tumor must be surgically removed. Some patients will also need their mitral valve replaced. This can be done during the same surgery.

Myxomas may come back if surgery did not remove all of the tumor cells.

Prognosis

Although a myxoma is not cancer, complications are common. Untreated, a myxoma can lead to an embolism (tumor cells breaking off and traveling with the bloodstream), which can block blood flow or cause the myxoma to grow in another part of the body. Myxoma fragments can move to the brain, eye, or limbs.

If the tumor grows inside the heart, it can block blood flow through the mitral valve and cause symptoms of mitral stenosis. This may require emergency surgery to prevent sudden death.

Complications