Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Template:Dj
Overview
Echocardiography findings in Cardiac tumors
- Echocardiography may be helpful in the diagnosis of cardiac tumors. Findings on an echocardiography suggestive of different cardiac tumors include:
Echocardiographic Features of Cardiac Tumors
Tumor |
Findings
|
Myxoma |
Myxoma appears as a heterogeneous, dynamic mass with one of two fundamental morphologies
- Polypoid myxomas have a bigger size, smooth exterior and a jagged center from hemorrhage and necrosis.
- Papillary myxomas are often narrower and have an elongated look with numerous villi.
|
Papillary Fibroelastoma |
Echocardiographic characteristics
- are tiny size, autonomous movement, and endocardial adherence.
- The margins seem stippled or glistening, particularly on TEE, due to agitation at the tumor–blood contact caused by finger-like extensions.
|
Rhabdomyoma |
On the echocardiography,
- they may look like tiny, well-circumscribed (many) clusters or a pedunculated bulge in the heart cavity.
- They manifest brighter than the surrounding tissue with myocardial embedding.
|
Fibroma |
They typically present as
- precise, well-defined, noncontractile, compact, and substantially echogenic tumors inside the myocardial tissue on echocardiography.
- Calcification could also develop.
|
Lipoma |
Lipomas are often
- large, stationary, devoid of a pedicle, and well-contained on echocardiography.
- They are uniform and calcification-free, hyperechoic in the myocardial cavity but hypoechoic in the pericardium.
|
Hemangioma |
Because hemangiomas are composed of distended vascular vessels, they exhibit on echocardiography as an echogenic mass with echolucencies.
- They can be present in the endocardium, myocardium, epicardium, or pericardium and are typically observed in the free wall of the right ventricle or the lateral wall of the left ventricle.
|
Lymphoma |
Lymphomas can emerge as
- uniform, penetrating aggregates that cause 'wall stiffening' and limiting hemodynamics or as granular masses that penetrate the cardiac chamber, particularly the right atrium on echocardiography.
|
Angiosarcoma |
They appear on echocardiography
- as lobulated heterogeneous aggregates with necrosis or bleeding.
- They lack a stalk, which distinguishes them from Myxomas and Papillary Fibroelastomas.
- Due to the presence of spindle cells, contrast echocardiography may not always detect a considerable increase, even when vascular.
|
References
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