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Pitfalls in the echocardiographic diagnosis of intracardiac and extracardiac masses.

Echocardiography 1993 March
Transthoracic and transesophageal two-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography remain the procedures of choice for evaluating cardiac mass lesions. Potential errors in diagnosis can be made, however, if the mass lesion's size, shape, mobility, and attachment to other cardiac structures are not clearly delineated. Usually a left atrial myxoma arises from the interatrial septum at the level of the fossa ovalis. Pitfalls in diagnosis occur when the tumor size is very small, or its attachment site is atypical or ill-defined. Atrial thrombi classically reside in an atrial appendage, but can also form in the body of the left atrium. The presence of atrial fibrillation rhythm, enlarged atrial chamber, prosthetic mitral/tricuspid valves, stenotic mitral/tricuspid valves, low cardiac output state, and spontaneous atrial contrast echoes are all features that favor the mass in question being a thrombus. Ventricular thrombi usually occur with poorly functioning ventricles. The diagnosis of ventricular thrombus should be made with great caution if the systolic function is normal, or if the mass has a band or thread-like appearance. A thorough knowledge of normal anatomical variants that can mimic pathological lesions is also important for reaching a correct diagnosis. Last but not least, as in all testing modalities, the patient's clinical picture should be correlated with the echocardiographic findings.

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