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ISSN: 1731-5530
Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
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3/2007
vol. 4
 
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Kardiochirurgia wad wrodzonych
Giant diverticulum of the right atrium

Girish Sharma
,
Cyprian Augustyn
,
Mariusz Mieczyński
,
Małgorzata Pawelec-Wojtalik
,
Anna Chodorowska
,
Krzysztof Wronecki
,
Romuald Cichoń

Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska 2007; 4 (3): 264–266
Online publish date: 2007/09/14
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Case report
A 3-month old female patient was admitted to the paediatric department because of asphyxiation. The patient was redirected to the Cardiology Department because of gross cardiomegaly on the chest radiograph (Fig. 1). An echocardiography and computer tomography scan revealed a giant diverticulum with a wide communication to the right atrium. Cranially the diverticulum extended above the aortic arch and caudally it covered the right ventricle to the apex of the heart and the whole left side of the thorax. The left lung was completely depressed (Fig. 2); furthermore an atrial septal defect of secondary type (ASD II) with bi-directional shunt and persistent ductus arteriosus (PDA) with l-r shunt was diagnosed. With the exception of mild tricuspid regurgitation no other cardiac abnormalities were noted. Clinically the patient was very unstable; atrial fibrillation with ventricular tachyarrhythmia was dominant. In blood gas checkup retention of carbon dioxide was noted; therefore the patient had to be supported by mechanical ventilation and continuous infusion of amiodarone. Two episodes of cardiac arrest due to low cardiac output qualified the patient for urgent atrioplasty. The potential hazard of extensive bleeding on sternotomy and symptoms of congestive cardiac failure persuaded us to conduct abdominal vessel cannulation. The abdomen was opened through a longitudinal incision along the linea alba. In the retroperitoneal region abdominal blood vessels were prepared for the cannulation (Fig. 3). The descending aorta was cannulated with a 10 Fr cannula just above the bifurcation and vena cava inferior with a 12 Fr cannula above the junction of the iliac veins. These cannulations were sufficient for the cooling phase and a hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated. The sternotomy exposed a huge thin-walled diverticulum sac occupying almost the whole thorax (Fig. 4). Blood was partly drained to the venous reservoir and the diverticulum sac was gently pushed aside to expose the great vessels, after which PDA was prepared and ligated. On reaching 18ºC in the rectum, the ascending aorta was cross-clamped; secondly, cold blood cardioplegic solution was administered to the aortic root; and thirdly, blood was drained to the venous reservoir. Circulatory pumps were stopped and the “paper thin” diverticulum sac was opened, which revealed a finely trabeculated translucent atrial wall. Following this, ASD II was closed with a direct suture. The tricuspid valve was morphologically normal. The diverticulum sac was excised and direct suture was employed for the atrioplasty. Reperfusion and rewarming was commenced after cannulation of the ascending aorta and the right atrium; meanwhile cannulas from the abdominal vessels were removed. The patient was weaned off cardiopulmonary bypass with minimal inotropic support. Total cardiopulmonary bypass time was 173 min and aortic cross-clamp time (circulatory arrest) 28 min. The patient was kept under sedation for two days because of deep hypothermia with circulatory arrest. The postoperative radiograph showed a normal size heart (Fig. 5). The circulatory system was stable with sinus rhythm.
Discussion
Diverticulum of the right atrium is a very rare congenital malformation. Bailey was the first to report such a case in 1955 [1] and surgical resection of the right atrial diverticulum was described by Morrow in 1968 [2]. Recently, a publication reported all cases in the literature from 1955 to 1998. Of 105 reported cases, only 60 were congenital diverticulum of the right atrium [3]; other cases were diverticulum of the coronary sinus and single or multiple saccular diverticulum of the right atrium. The incidence of such malformation is difficult to estimate, especially in asymptomatic patients as many of them (48%) remain asymptomatic. They are sometimes accidentally diagnosed because of gross cardiomegaly during a routine chest radiograph or discovered during the autopsy. Other cardiac conditions such as Ebstein anomaly, pericardial effusion, pericardial cysts and cardiac tumors can also mimic gross cardiomegaly on a chest radiograph [4]. Accurate diagnosis and differentiation from other cardiac anomalies should be considered before medical or surgical approach. In symptomatic patients, atrial arrhythmia, respiratory distress, jugular engorgement, oedema of the ankles and hepatomegaly are the major complaints [3]. Surgical atrioplasty is advised in symptomatic patients. The low operative mortality and high success rate justify the surgical approach [3] and patients with atrial fibrillation have been treated successfully with atrioplasty [5, 6]. Even in asymptomatic patients surgery should be considered because of the high risk of thrombus formation in the right atrium or the likelihood of developing atrial fibrillation. Some authors suggest that only symptomatic patients should be operated on; in the absence of symptoms anticoagulation as a precaution against thromboembolization should be considered [3, 7]. But these patients in future may develop atrial fibrillation even after surgical cryoablation [8]. Sudden deaths have also been reported [9]. In conclusion, right atrial diverticulum should be treated surgically to prevent rhythm disturbances, potential thrombus embolism, atrial rupture or congestive cardiac failure.

References
1. Bailey CP. Surgery of the heart. Lea and Febiger, Philadelphia 1955; 413-420. 2. Morrow AG, Behrendt DM. Congenital aneurysm (diverticulum) of the right atrium. Clinical manifestations and results of operative treatment. Circulation 1968; 38: 124-128. 3. Binder TM, Rosenhek R, Frank H, Gwechenberger M, Maurer G, Baumgartner H. Congenital malformations of the right atrium and the coronary sinus: an analysis based on 103 cases reported in the literature and two additional cases. Chest 2000; 117: 1740-1748. 4. Maione S, Giunta A, Betocchi S, Ferro G, Vigorito C, Chiariello M. Two-dimensional echocardiography in idiopathic enlargement of the right atrium. Reliability and limitations. Cardiology 1983; 70: 216-222. 5. Miyamura H, Nakagomi M, Eguchi S, Aizawa Y. Successful surgical treatment of incessant automatic atrial tachycardia with atrial aneurysm. Ann Thorac Surg 1990; 50: 476-478. 6. Scalia GM, Stafford WJ, Burstow DJ, Carruthers T, Tesar PJ. Successful treatment of incessant atrial flutter with excision of congenital giant right atrial aneurysm diagnosed by transesophageal echocardiography. Am Heart J 1995; 129: 834-835. 7. Kishore N, Ravi, Gowda N, Devananda. Giant right atrium- A case report. Ann Card Anaesth 2005; 8: 58-60. 8. Campbell RM, Parks WJ, Crawford FA, Gillette PC. Right atrial diverticulum presenting as Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. Pacinng Clin Electrophysiol 1992; 15: 1101-1104. 9. Tenckhoff L, Stamm SJ, Beckwith JB. Sudden death in idiopathic (congenital) right atrial enlargement. Postmortem findings and review of cases. Circulation 1969; 40: 227-235.
Copyright: © 2007 Polish Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons (Polskie Towarzystwo KardioTorakochirurgów) and the editors of the Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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