Recurrent Cardiac Myxoma: The Surgical Implications of Two Distinct Groups of Patients

1989 
15 consecutive cases where patients (11 female, 4 male) had undergone surgical excision of cardiac myxoma were reviewed. The 11 survivors were re-assessed by trans-oesophageal echocardiography and recurrent myxoma was detected in 2 patients. These two were the only patients who had originally presented with multiple myxomas. Analysis of these cases in conjunction with 26 previously reported cases of recurrence identifies two distinct groups of patients. In one group (12 cases, mean age 48.7 years) recurrence occurred at the site of previous excision, typically following the removal of a single septal myxoma by partial thickness excision. In the second group, which includes our two cases, (16 cases, mean age 30.6 years) recurrent myxoma was found distant to the site of previous excision, typically in younger patients who had multiple myxomas at original operation. These results suggest that 1) single myxomas should be removed by full thickness excision 2) in younger patients with multiple myxomas surgery should be as radical as possible.
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