Primary cardiac sarcoma is an uncommon disease. In particular, leiomyosarcoma of cardiovascular origin is extremely rare. Half of all cardiac leiomyosarcomas are located in the left atrium. Due to the extreme rarity of left atrial leiomyosarcoma, there is no great experience in its management. This review includes a report of a case of left atrial leiomyosarcoma followed up over 45 months. The literature review examines the distribution of left atrial leiomyosarcoma, the physiological reasons for the tendency of cardiac leiomyosarcoma to be localized to the left atrial cavity, the clinical and physical appearance of this disease, and the key differences between left atrial leiomyosarcoma and the most common left atrial tumor, myxoma. The morphological features, using light and electron microscopy and immunochemical staining, are discussed. Treatment modalities including adjuvant therapy and surgical resection are examined and their effectiveness compared. Opinions regarding the results and optimal treatment of leiomyosarcoma are not always in agreement. This highlights the need for inter-hospital comparison to determine the optimal treatment regimen.
Unilateral lung agenesis is a rare congenital anomaly often combined with congenital malformations of different systems. A case of tetralogy of Fallot repair with unilateral left lung agenesis via median sternotomy is described for the first time. In this case, the choice of surgical approach to the heart could be affected by the fears of not getting optimal surgical exposition via median sternotomy due to severe displacement of the chest organs. The case demonstrates the median sternotomy as an optimal surgical approach even in high degrees of organ displacement caused by a combination of left pulmonary agenesis and cardiac lesions.
The combination of coronary artery disease and its complications (ischemic mitral regurgitation etc.) with the aneurysm of the descending thoracic aorta is not a rare case. The single-stage correction of coronary/intracardiac/aortic lesions may be considered as a way of managing the combined patients. Simultaneous multi-vessel coronary artery bypass grafting, suture mitral annuloplasty and descending aortic aneurysm replacement with synthetic prosthesis is described. The operation was performed through the left thoracotomy with cardiopulmonary bypass established by the cannulation of the ascending aorta and of the right atrial appendage. Ventricular fibrillation and no clamping of the ascending aorta were used. The circulatory arrest was induced for the construction of the proximal anastomosis between the descending aorta and the synthetic prosthesis. No complications related to the operation were diagnosed for the 14-month follow-up. Several technical points seem optimal for the combined procedure: (1) Minimization of manipulations on the ascending aorta (using of pedicled left internal thoracic artery; construction of the proximal anastomoses with synthetic aortic prosthesis; unclamped ascending aorta). (2) Revascularization of all coronary areas and correction of intracardiac lesions through the left thoracotomy. Individual planning of the procedural technical points for every patient may provide a safe feasibility of the combined procedure.
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