RESUMO
A 62-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of fever in August 2002. She had been treated under a diagnosis of Eisenmenger syndrome with ventricular septal defect since 1988. On admission, echocardiography and color Doppler echocardiography revealed a markedly enlarged pulmonary artery with a mobile flap, and dissection of the pulmonary artery. The origin of the fever could not be identified, and the fever subsided spontaneously without specific treatment. She had no chest pain, but fever might have been a sign of dissection in this patient. Longstanding pulmonary hypertension may cause dissection, which may lead to sudden death or pulmonary hemorrhage often seen in patients with Eisenmenger syndrome. Our patient was a rare survivor without serious bleeding complication.
Assuntos
Dissecção Aórtica/etiologia , Complexo de Eisenmenger/etiologia , Comunicação Interventricular/complicações , Artéria Pulmonar , Dissecção Aórtica/diagnóstico por imagem , Ecocardiografia , Feminino , Febre/etiologia , Humanos , Hipertensão Pulmonar/complicações , Pessoa de Meia-IdadeRESUMO
A 23-year-old man was admitted to our hospital for evaluation of syncope and intracardiac masses. Echocardiography revealed three masses in the right ventricle and one in the left ventricle. The largest mass, 4 by 5 cm, occupied the right ventricular outflow tract and prolapsed through the pulmonary valve orifice. Right ventricular systolic pressure was 65 mmHg. A soft mass, 4 by 5 cm, was found on the left subcostal abdominal wall and multiple pigmented spots on the face and trunk. Histological examination of the resected tumors, including the abdominal soft mass, were consistent with myxoma. The combination of multiple cardiac and abdominal wall myxomas and pigmented skin lesions in this young patient is considered to be a diagnostic feature of Carney complex.