Abstract
We present three cases of so-called mesothelial/monocytic incidental cardiac excrescences (MICE) of the heart and a brief review of related literature. Case 1 was a 51-year-old woman who underwent mitral- and aortic-valve replacement. A tissue sample was submitted as a thrombus attached to the left atrial endocardium. Case 2 was a 69-year-old woman who underwent mitral-valve replacement. The sample was incidentally obtained as whitish clot-like fragments, but its exact origin was not known. Case 3 was a 68-year-old woman who underwent mitral-valve replacement for suspected infective endocarditis. The sample adherent to the pericardium was removed after valvular surgery. Histologically, these lesions were composed of a mixture of plump histiocytoid cells, a papillary arrangement of cuboidal cells, various sized vacuoles, and fibrin. The nests of cuboidal cells resembled cancer cells but showed features of mesothelial cells and no proliferative activity, immunohistochemically or ultrastructurally. In all cases, a suction tube placed in the left atrium was occasionally used to remove overflowing intrapericardial fluid during the surgery. The tip of the suction tube was covered with spiral wire, which is likely to transfer the stripped pericardial mesothelial cells to the left atrium. The significance of MICE is their possibility of being misdiagnosed as metastatic carcinoma by pathologists and a risk of arterial embolization by mesothelial debris clinically.
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Received: 20 August 1999 / Accepted: 25 February 2000
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Bando, Y., Kitagawa, T., Uehara, H. et al. So-called mesothelial/monocytic incidental cardiac excrescences obtained during valve replacement surgery: report of three cases and literature review. Virchows Archiv 437, 331–335 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004280000232
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004280000232