RESUMO
Cardiac lipomas are generally asymptomatic even in large dimensions. Echocardiograms can identify tumors, but cardiac magnetic resonance imaging or cardiac computerized tomography can differentiate cardiac lipomas from other cardiac tumors. The present study is a case report of an asymptomatic 30-year-old man diagnosed with atrial lipoma. The patient received cardiac surgery and the intervention consisted of exclusion of the right atrial (RA) tumor and reconstruction of the right atrium with 'XenoSure' patch in extracorporeal circulation through a minimally invasive approach. A short PubMed literature review was performed and 26 cases of RA lipomas with available details were found. Cardiac tumors may cause clinical presentation through different pathways. Symptoms related to an RA lipoma were present in 21 out of 26 patients (80%). The symptoms varied greatly, dyspnea being the most common of them. In one case, the lipoma was found during the autopsy of a patient after sudden death. Large cardiac lipomas can lead to complications such as obstruction of ventricular outflow tract, electric disorders, embolism or pericardial effusion. Obstruction of the right ventricular outflow tract was reported in 11 out of 26 patients (42%) diagnosed with RA lipoma. Generally, atrial lipoma can have various sizes. The most useful imaging technique was transthoracic echocardiography. Accurate diagnosis and evaluation of cardiac lipoma is dependent on multimodality imaging methods, including cardiac magnetic resonance. Surgery is the treatment of choice, but the risk-benefit ratio must be considered, and shared decision making must be taken into account. The present review data showed that 23 out of 25 patients (92%) underwent surgery. Among these patients, only 1 out of 23 received a minimally invasive approach in 2021. Cardiac lipomas are rare entities, usually asymptomatic, that can occur at any age. The most useful diagnostic method of cardiac tumors is echocardiography, but nuclear magnetic resonance can also specify the type and characteristics of tumors.
RESUMO
Non-cutaneous melanoma is a very rare clinical entity. Gastric melanoma can be primary or secondary, but determining their nature is in most cases very challenging. To date, very few cases of primary gastric melanoma have been described in the literature. We report the first case of primary gastric melanoma documented in a Romanian patient, confirmed through clinical, imagistic, and pathological diagnosis. A 68-year-old female patient presented to our hospital with complaints of dyspepsia, abdominal pain, and weight loss. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy revealed two large sessile masses in the gastric fundus, which was histologically compatible with melanoma; immunohistochemistry staining was positive for vimentin, S100 protein, HMB45 antibody and Melan A/MART1, and negative for pan-CKAE1/AE3, leukocyte common antigen and DOG1. Extensive dermatological and ophthalmological examinations did not identify a primary lesion. The patient was therefore diagnosed with primary melanoma of the stomach. At the time of the diagnosis, multiple bone and pulmonary metastases were detected and considering the poor general status of the patient, surgery was not recommended. She died three months following diagnosis. A review of the literature identified only 32 other reported cases of primary gastric melanoma, all in individuals ≥50 years of age and most of them in male patients. Partial or total gastrectomy was the usual treatment of choice, but prognosis was overall poor. Awareness of this rare condition must be increased among healthcare providers, as early detection can improve survival chances.