Colon carcinoma (CA) is one of the most common cancers worldwide. Cardiac metastasis in CA is quite rare with only a few incidences. These tumors are usually clinically silent and are discovered on autopsy. We present a case of a 62-year-old woman, known diabetic, hypertensive, and hypothyroid patient, who presented with complaints of abdominal distention and obstipation with multiple episodes of vomiting undigested food particles for three days. She had been passing dark tarry stools infrequently for over a month. She complained of a progressive loss of appetite and 5 kg weight loss over a month. Her examination revealed pallor and irregular pulse with a rate of 94/min. She had a distended non-tender abdomen and absent bowel sounds. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT) abdomen showed circumferential thickening of the descending colon, causing acute stenosis with multiple liver metastases and enlarged pericolic lymph nodes. Serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) was elevated, 55.45 ng/mL. She underwent an emergency exploratory laparotomy with transverse loop colostomy. Histopathology report showed moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma. ECG showed atrial fibrillation and two-dimensional echocardiogram showed right ventricular metastasis. High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) thorax was done to confirm the diagnosis.The common sites of metastases from colorectal cancer are the lymph nodes, liver, and lungs. When cardiac metastasis occurs, it often presents with features of heart failure. Our patient presented with atrial fibrillation. As the incidence of cardiac metastasis is quite rare, there is no standard established treatment. Certain chemotherapeutic drugs, such as 5-fluorouracil, oxaliplatin, irinotecan (FOLFIRINOX regimen), have been shown to improve cardiac metastases. Due to the extensive spread of primary cancer in our patient, she was planned for palliative chemotherapy; however, the patient expired before initiation of therapy.
Homocysteine is a toxic, sulphur-containing intermediate of methionine metabolism. Hyperhomocysteinemia has been proposed as an important risk factor for ischemic stroke. We present the case of a 39-year-old male who sustained a cerebrovascular accident with left hemiparesis two years back; the patient was not compliant with his medications, and now presented with complaints of giddiness, reduced vision, and double vision. Vision disturbances were bilateral, acute in onset, progressive over time, and predominantly affected the peripheral vision. On ophthalmic examination, homonymous hemianopia was noted, and finger counting was absent in both eyes. Confrontation test revealed a bilateral reduced field of vision more so in the left eye. Baseline investigations were unremarkable except for mildly elevated serum. Homocysteine and neuroimaging showed acute infarct with hemorrhagic transformation in the right occipito-parietal region and small acute non-hemorrhagic infarcts in the right thalamus and right side of the splfingerenium of the corpus callosum. Given the visual disturbance, Humphrey visual field (HVF) perimetry was done and it revealed left homonymous congruous hemianopia, likely due to right parietal lobe infarct. The patient had recurrent infarcts previously involving anterior and posterior circulation.
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