1997 Volume 61 Issue 11 Pages 943-946
A previously healthy 64-year-old woman attended our hospital with chest pain, facial edema, and general fatigue. A chest radiograph revealed cardiomegaly, small bilateral pleural effusions, and hilar congestion - findings that improved after early therapy with furosemide and methyldigoxin. A chest radiograph recorded 7 years earlier had revealed no dilation of cardiac shadow. There were no findings suggesting atrial septal defect (ASD) or valvular heart disease. Echocardiography revealed a tumor-like mass adhering to the posterior wall of the left atrium. Color-flow Doppler echocardiography revealed a left-to-right shunt at the atrial level. The Qp/Q s ratio as measured by cardiac catheterization was 2.0. Coronary angiography revealed abnormal dilated arteries from the atrioventricular nodal branch and several feeding arteries from the left circumflex branch. We hypothesized that the left-to-right shunt could be due to the tumor, which extended to the rim of the patent foramen ovale, or to the very small, previously unrecognized, ASD. This patient died 6 months after her first admission and an autopsy was performed. Light microscopic examination of the tumor revealed spindle-shaped fibroblast-like cells arranged in a storiform or fascicular pattern. The immunohistochemical findings were consistent with malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) . In the literature, Ieft-to-right shunt at the atrial level has not been reported in patients with cardiac MFH. (Jpn Circ J 1997; 61: 943 - 946)