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  Vol. 261 No. 10, March 10, 1989 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Echocardiographic Detection of Left Atrial Extension of Bronchial Carcinoma

Aleksandar D. Popovic, MD; Pamela Harrigan, RDMS; Anthony J. Sanfilippo, MD, FRCPC; Arthur E. Weyman, MD

JAMA. 1989;261(10):1478-1480.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

IT IS well known from autopsy series that metastatic tumors of the heart can be found in 1.5% to 20.6% (average, 6%) of patients with malignancies.1 The most common cause of metastatic heart disease is bronchial carcinoma, followed by carcinoma of the breast, malignant melanoma, lymphoma, and leukemia, in decreasing order of frequency.1 However, cardiac invasion is infrequently diagnosed ante mortem due to the lack of specific clinical manifestations.2

Atrial extension has been reported as a common route of local spread in patients with bronchial carcinoma.3,4 The echocardiographic features of such extension have been illustrated in only two cases,5,6 to our knowledge. The purpose of this report is to describe three patients with bronchial carcinoma in whom left atrial extension of the tumor was diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiography.

REPORT OF CASES

CASE 1.—

An 80-year-old man had a history of long-standing murmur consistent with aortic . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

From the Cardiac Ultrasound Laboratory, Cardiac Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston. Dr Popovic is now with the Clinical-Hospital Center Zemun and Belgrade University Medical School, Yugoslavia.


Footnotes

Reprint requests to Cardiac Ultrasound Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Zero Emerson Place, Suite 2F, Boston, MA 02114 (Dr Weyman).



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