(Circulation. 1998;98:2352-2353.)
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Images in Cardiovascular Medicine |
From the Department of Cardiology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary (I.R.M.), and the Imperial College School of Medicine, National Heart and Lung Institute, Section of Paediatrics, London (R.H.A.), UK.
Correspondence to Dr I. Mahy, Department of Cardiology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen AB25 2ZN, UK.
A69-year-old diabetic man without previous cardiac
history was admitted for stabilization of glycemic control. A routine
ECG showed atrial fibrillation with right bundle-branch block, and the
chest radiograph revealed marked prominence of the central
pulmonary arteries. Accordingly, transthoracic
echocardiography was performed, which demonstrated
an atrial septal defect with moderate pulmonary hypertension
and substantial enlargement of the right heart. Within the right
atrium, a poorly defined mobile "mass" was identified.
Transesophageal echocardiography
performed to further characterize this lesion confirmed the presence of
an atrial septal defect within the fossa ovalis. It demonstrated the
mobile structure within the right atrium to be a large, redundant
eustachian valve. Without the motion of the heart, the windsock thus
formed undulated between the atrial septum and the orifice of the
tricuspid valve in a serpentine fashion (Figure
). There
was no evidence of obstruction within the right heart due to the
redundant venous valve, although sacklike extensions of such valves
have been removed at surgery from patients with evidence of
obstruction.1
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The eustachian and thebesian valves represent the remnants of
the valves of the embryonic systemic venous sinus (sinus venosus) and
guard the orifices of the inferior caval vein and
coronary sinus, respectively.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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