• J Card Surg · Nov 1996

    Case Reports

    Management of mobile right atrial thrombi: a therapeutic dilemma.

    • C P Shah, R K Thakur, J H Ip, B Xie, and G M Guiraudon.
    • Division of Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery, University Hospital, London, Canada.
    • J Card Surg. 1996 Nov 1; 11 (6): 428-31.

    BackgroundMobile right atrial thrombus is an uncommon finding on two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography. Therapeutic alternatives include systemic heparinization, systemic or local thrombolysis, and surgical removal. We report our clinical experience in six patients over a 3-year period (6000 echocardiograms) at a tertiary care referral center.MethodsThere were four men and two women with a mean age of 63 years (range: 47 to 73 years). Indications for echocardiography consisted of progressive dyspnea and chest pain in five patients and syncope with chest pain in one patient.ResultsAll were observed to have a mobile thrombus in the right atrium. Ventilation perfusion (V/Q) scanning confirmed V/Q mismatch in all patients. Subsequent echocardiography (minutes to 1 day later) in three patients demonstrated absence of the thrombus suggesting pulmonary embolization. One patient died during transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) and autopsy confirmed a large pulmonary embolization in the main pulmonary artery. Treatment consisted of heparinization in 3 patients, systemic thrombolysis in 1 patient, and surgical removal of the thrombus in 1 patient. At surgery, a long serpiginous thrombus was seen in the right atrium, tethered to a fenestrated eustachian valve. There were 3 deaths: 1 patient treated with heparin; 1 patient treated with thrombolysis; and 1 during TEE. Two of the three patients treated with heparin and one patient undergoing surgical removal survived hospitalization.ConclusionsMobile thrombus in the right atrium is an unusual echocardiographic finding. It portends a poor prognosis with death due to pulmonary embolism.

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