%0 Case Reports %T STEMI or not STEMI? A multimodality imaging approach to a challenging intracardiac mass with a tricky presentation. %A Piscitelli L %A Robles AG %A Costantino R %A Forte V %A Romano S %A Sciarra L %A Bartolomucci F %A Rosario Chieppa DR %J Future Cardiol %V 20 %N 5 %D 2024 Apr 25 %M 38899769 暂无%R 10.1080/14796678.2024.2360845 %X Cardiac tumors, due to the various clinical scenarios and their histological subtypes, are still challenging for clinicians. They are differentiated into primary and secondary. The latest are more common and are usually lung and breast cancers, melanomas, and lymphoma metastasis. We present a case of a 73-year-old woman, with a history of breast cancer 10 years earlier, admitted to Cath lab for an elevation of the ST-segment of the electrocardiogram, myocardial infarction. Echocardiogram showed a curious abnormality in the myocardial wall. Thanks to a multimodality imaging strategy, including contrast-enhanced echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance, characterization of the underlying pathology was clear and, thus, the appropriate management and therapy.
This is the case of a cardiac metastatic tumor, whose certain diagnosis can only be made by myocardial biopsy – an invasive sample of heart tissue – unfortunately not available in our case. Alternatively, we puzzled data from two second-level imaging techniques: contrast-enhanced cardiac ultrasound and cardiac magnetic resonance, which allowed us to better evaluate the nature of this cardiac mass. The former gave information about its blood supply, the latter gave information about tissue characterization. In this paper, we show how a complete integration of data from clinical and a stepwise multimodality imaging-based approach may allow a diagnosis in a complex clinical case.