Case Reports in Clinical Medicine
Vol.06 No.06(2017), Article ID:77252,32 pages
10.4236/crcm.2017.66017

Rheumatic Giant Left Atrium―An Overview

Ramachandran Muthiah

Thoothukudi Medical College Hospital, Thoothukudi, India

Copyright © 2017 by author and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0).

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Received: May 18, 2017; Accepted: June 25, 2017; Published: June 28, 2017

ABSTRACT

Aim: To present the aneurysmal dilatation of left atrium due to rheumatic mitral valve disease and its clinical consequences such as arrhythmic, thromboembolic and compressive manifestations. Introduction: Extreme enlargement of left atrium, usually referred to as giant, gigantic or aneurysmal dilatation is an uncommon finding with a reported incidence of 0.3% in rheumatic heart disease. It is an important clinical risk identifier to predict the outcome of cardiovascular disease. Case reports: Aneurysmal left atrium correlating with the length of pure mitral regurgitation jet in a 18-year-old girl, posterior mitral leaflet prolapse with regurgitation jet swirling around the entire interatrial septum in a 37-year-old male, Giant left atrium in mixed mitral valve disease in a 37-year-old female and a thrombosed giant left atrium resembling as “coconut” in a 50-year-old female were reported. Conclusion: Giant left atrium may be misinterpreted as right-sided pleural effusion, pericardial effusion and mediastinal tumor on X-ray chest and so echocardiographic evaluation is mandatory to exclude the aneurysmal left atrium in such conditions.

Keywords:

Giant Left Atrium, PML (Posterior Mitral Leaflet) Prolapse, Coconut Atrium, Atrial Fibrillation, Surgical Procedures

1. Introduction

The left atrium (LA) is an asymmetrical cavity, often referred as ‘forgotten chamber’ compared with left ventricle in the past years and it is oriented leftward and posterior to the right atrium in the mediastinum. The walls of the left atrium can be described as superior (roof), posterior (inferoposterior), left lateral, septal, anterior and it is relatively smooth, whereas the appendage is rough with pectinate muscles. The walls are composed of overlapping layers of myocardial fibers with varying thickness; the circular fibers run parallel; the longitudinal fibers perpendicular and the oblique fibers arranged between the two axes to the atrioventricular valve plane [1] . The left atrium functions as a reservoir, conduit, and pump to LV filling. During ventricular systole, the LA receives blood from pulmonary veins as a reservoir (40%), it distends for passive emptying as a conduit (35%) in early diastole, as a pump (25%) [2] by active contraction of atrial muscle in late diastole and mechanically accelerates the transition between the almost continuous flow through the pulmonary venous circulation and intermittent filling of LV. These LA phasic functions depend on LV diastolic relaxation, the reservoir and pump functions predominate in slow relaxation and the conduit function predominates in restrictive filling phases of cardiac cycle [3] .

In normal subjects, the left atrium is an ovoid-elliptical shaped chamber and tends to become more rounded when it is enlarged. LA enlargement is usually induced by pressure and/or volume overload, and various factors and cardiovascular diseases are associated with LA size [4] . The pressure overload is usually secondary to increased LA afterload due to mitral stenosis or LV dysfunction. LA volume overload resulting from mitral regurgitation, arteriovenous fistula, left to right shunt, or high cardiac output state. LA volume has been termed as “glycosylated hemoglobin” of diastolic dysfunction [5] and LA volume index < 29 ml/m2 is proposed as a prerequisite to exclude HF (heart failure) with preserved systolic function [6] . The LA volume index <34 ml/m2 indicates no LAE (left atrial enlargement); 34 - 39 ml/m2 is moderate; >39 ml/m2 is severe [7] and >140 ml/m2 is proposed as “giant left atrium”. The normal values of LA size and its enlargement are shown in Table 1.

LA enlargement is a common feature of rheumatic mitral valve disease. Giant left atrium (size > 6 cm in diameter [8] ) is a rare condition associated with rheumatic mitral valve regurgitation or mixed mitral disease with predominant regurgitation, huge thrombus formation [9] and so these cases had been reported.

2. Case Reports

Case 1. PML (posterior mitral leaflet) prolapse causing mitral regurgitation without LA (left atrium) enlargement as shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2 (non- rheumatic) in a 40-year-old male. The patient was advised lifelong penicillin prophylaxis and periodic follow up.

Table 1. Showing the normal values of LA size and its enlargement [10] .

Figure 1. Apical four chamber view showing the PML (posterior mitral leaflet) prolapse (non-rheumatic) in a 40-year-old male. Left atrium (LA) not dilated.

Figure 2. Apical four chamber view showing the mitral regurgitation swirling around IAS (interatrial septum) in a 40-year-old male due to PML (posterior mitral leaflet) prolapse. LA (left atrium not dilated).

Case 2. PML (posterior mitral leaflet) prolapse causing severe mitral regurgitation with aneurysmal LA (left atrium) as shown in Figures 3-8 due to PML chordal rupture of rheumatic etiology in a 47-year-old male. Patient was advised lifelong penicillin prophylaxis and MVR (mitral valve replacement).

Figure 3. X-ray chest PA (postero-anterior) view showing the “4-bump” left heart border as AO (aortic knuckle), MPA (Main pulmonary artery), LAA (dilated convex left atrial appendage (third Mogul sign)), LV (left ventricle). Aneurysmal left atrium elevating the left main stem bronchus which becomes more horizontal and a “double density sign” in the right heart border (right arrow). Left arrow showing the GLA (giant left atrium) reaching towards left chest wall.

Figure 4. Parasternal long axis view showing the PML (posterior mitral leaflet) chordal rupture of rheumatic etiology in a 47-year-old male. Both AML (anterior mitral leaflet) and PML (posterior mitral leaflet) of mitral valve are thick and calcified due to rheumatic etiology.

Figure 5. Parasternal long axis view showing the “bileaflet” MR (mitral regurgitation) jet originating from PML (posterior mitral leaflet) in a 47-year-old male.

Figure 6. Parasternal long axis view showing the “bileaflet” mitral regurgitation due to PML chordal rupture in a 47-year-old male.

Figure 7. Tilted apical view showing the PML regurgitation in a 47-year-old male.

Figure 8. Tilted apical view showing the PML regurgitation swirling around the IAS (interatrial septum) in a 47-year-old male and the left atrium is aneurysmally dilated.

Case 3. Aneurysmal left atrium in an 18-year-old girl due to isolated severe rheumatic mitral regurgitation as shown in Figures 9-14. The patient was presented with stroke and treated with anticoagulants, antiplatelet agents, advised lifelong penicillin prophylaxis and MVR (mitral valve replacement).

Figure 9. X-ray chest PA (postero-anterior) view showing the dilated LA (left atrium) towards left chest wall in an isolated severe rheumatic mitral regurgitation in an 18-year-old girl. The left heart border is “4-bump” as aortic knuckle (AO), MPA (main pulmonary artery), LAA (dilated convex left atrial appendage-third Mogul sign) and LV (left ventricle). Right arrow showing the “Double density sign” of LA enlargement in the right heart border. Left arrow showing the GLA (giant left atrium) reaching the left chest wall.

Case 4. Giant left atrium in mixed rheumatic mitral valve disease both mitral stenosis and regurgitation as shown in Figures 15-20 in a 47-year-old female. The patient was advised lifelong penicillin prophylaxis, MVR (mitral valve replacement), LA volume reduction surgery with Cox-Maze procedure for atrial fibrillation.

Case 5. Giant left atrium with dense SEC (spontaneous echo contrast) visible as massive thrombus occupying the entire giant left atrium and resembling as “coconut atrium” as shown in Figures 21-25 and movie in Figure 26 in rheumatic mitral stenosis in a 50-year-old female. Patient was advised lifelong penicillin prophylaxis, MVR (mitral valve replacement) and removal of thrombus with inverted T-shaped biatrial incision (endoatriectomy-transeptal superior approach), but the thrombus was resolving with prolonged oral anticoagulant therapy ( warfarin: 2.5 mg daily) as shown in Figure 27 without any embolic episodes on follow up.

Figure 10. ECG showing the wide P wave―140 ms (>120 ms) in lead II and increased negative terminal―0.08 mm (>0.04 mm) in V1 suggesting the LA (left atrial ) enlargement.

Figure 11. Parasternal long axis view showing the aneurysmal left atrium in an 18-year-old girl due to pure rheumatic mitral regurgitation.

Figure 12. Parasternal long axis view showing the severe mitral regurgitation touching the entire length of dilated left atrium and the length of jet is correlating with superior-inferior dimension of the left atrium in an 18-year-old girl.

Figure 13. Parasternal long axis view showing the severe rheumatic mitral regurgitation jet occupying the entire aneurysmal left atrium in an 18-year-old girl.

Figure 14. Color-flow M-mode showing the holosystolic mitral regurgitation jet in an 18-year-old girl.

Figure 15. X-ray chest PA (postero-anterior) view-arrows showing the extension of giant left atrium (GLA) to both chest walls.

3. Discussion

3.1. Review of Literature

In 1849, Hewett was the first to describe the giant left atrium in autopsy series of mitral valve disease [11] . When LA enlarges, it moves rightward and Hurst described the giant left atrium as one that touches the right lateral thoracic wall (giant left atrial syndrome) in chest X-ray and it is almost always caused by rheumatic mitral valve disease [12] with predominant mitral regurgitation than mitral stenosis and atrial fibrillation is mostly present in this condition. In 1984, Piccoli, et al. consider giant left atrium when the cardio-thoracic ratio in the chest X-ray is >0.7 in addition to a left atrial anteroposterior diameter of >8 cm in transthoracic echocardiography [13] . Massive dilatation of the left atrium occurs in all directions, may reach both chest walls as in Figure 15 and particularly to the right and sometimes to the left as in Figure 3 and Figure 9 [14] . Giant LA is rarely observed in non-rheumatic mitral valve involvement and it does not

Figure 16. ECG showing the left atrial enlargement, coarse atrial fibrillation (>1 mm), fine atrial fibrillation (fibrillatory waves <1 mm) and biventricular hypertrophy (LVH pattern + deep S wave in L1, aVL and lateral precordial leads with right axis deviation (RVH)).

Figure 17. Parasternal long axis view showing the giant left atrium in mixed mitral valve disease in a 47-year-old female. The left atrium is severely enlarged, anatomically distorted and making it difficult to find a correct angle for adequate measurement. The giant left atrium compressing the postero-basal part of LV (left ventricle) and the length of compression is 36 mm (>30 mm).

Figure 18. Parasternal long axis view showing the giant left atrium looks like a “crown (LV) on a cushion (aneurysmal left atrium)” appearance in a 47-year-old female.

Figure 19. Parasternal long axis view showing the severe mitral regurgitation and giant left atrium in a 47-year-old female.

Figure 20. Parasternal long axis view showing the mitral stenosis jet and giant left atrium in a 47-year-old female.

Figure 21. Parasternal long axis view showing the dense SEC (spontaneous echo contrast) visible as thrombus occupying the entire giant left atrium in a 50-year-old female.

Figure 22. Tilted apical view showing the thrombus occupying the entire left atrium in a 50-year-old female.

Figure 23. Tilted apical view showing the giant thrombosed left atrium in a 50-year-old female measuring as 203 × 176 mm.

Figure 24. Tilted apical view showing the giant thrombosed left atrium in a 50-year-old female resembling as a “coconut” as in Figure 25.

Figure 25. Showing the “coconut”.

Figure 26. Movie showing the “swirling motion” of SEC (spontaneous echo contrast) in a 50-year-old female.

Figure 27. Parasternal long axis view showing the SEC (spontaneous echo contrast- thrombus) resolving with anticoagulant therapy in a 50-year old female.

occur in mitral regurgitation due to other causes. Severe mitral regurgitation due to MVP does not produce a giant left atrium since there is no associated primary left atrial disease as shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2. Phua and Brownsberger, et al. reported giant left atrium due to mitral valve prolapse [15] and the largest “non-rheumatic” giant left atrium reported in mitral valve prolapse measured 12 × 13 cm [16] . A giant left atrium associated with PML (posterior mitral leaflet) prolapse) due to severe mitral regurgitation as a result of chordal rupture with rheumatic etiology was shown in Figures 4-8. The largest reported giant left atrium due to untreated rheumatic heart disease measured 19.3 × 14.7 cm [17] and 20 × 16.8 cm [18] . Owen et al. misinterpreted a giant left atrium as right- sided pleural effusion and punctured [19] , the postmortem examination revealed a severely enlarged left atrium occupying the entire thoracic cavity and this is the first published case of “giant left atrium”, a term that was introduced by Fisher et al. [20] in 1956. Schwartzman et al. performed a CT-guided biopsy in a giant left atrium believing it to be a malignant mass [21] . There is no definition of a giant left atrium based on LA volume and an anteroposterior atrial diameter > 65 mm as “giant left atrium”, corresponding to 1.6 times the normal value (<40 mm) [22] . In clinical practice, the severely enlarged and anatomically distorted left atrium, making it difficult to find a correct angle for an adequate measurement as in Figure 17 and the cut off’s are arbitrary whether an atrium is severely dilated or giant.

3.2. Pathogenesis

Left atrial dilatation may be congenital or acquired. The congenital aneurysmal dilatation of left atrium most frequently involves the left atrial appendage, rarely affects the body of left atrium [23] and it may be caused by congenital dysplasia of musculi pectinati and LA muscle bundles related to them [24] . Congenital weakness of the atrium results in local dilation gradually increases in size and their walls may be composed of hypertrophied myocardium or fibrous tissue [25] . If the aneurysmal wall protruding from the LA has normal myocytes, it is termed as LA diverticulum [26] .

Massive enlargement of left atrium is usually associated with an acquired cause of long-standing rheumatic mitral valve disease and its exact etiology is not fully understood. Rheumatic pancarditis damages the entire heart by causing chronic inflammation and weakening its tissues, including the left atrial wall that then dilates more easily. Occasionally, the left atrium can reach extreme sizes even under normal mitral valve function in both adults and children [27] . Histologically, the atrial wall of giant left atrium does not usually reveal Aschoff bodies (perivascular fibrinoid necrosis in the myocardium), but the fibrosis and chronic inflammatory changes are mostly present.

In mitral regurgitation, the left atrial size is proportionately related to compliance and the dilated left atrium compensates for increased stress by an initial increase in compliance. This reservoir effect of a large left atrium is beneficial to protect the lungs from pulmonary hypertension and edema [28] [29] . Increased left atrial and pulmonary pressures, in case of very large left atrium (>60 mm) provide the substrate as a structural precursor of atrial fibrillation [30] [31] which contributes further atrial dilation in mitral valve disease [32] . The dilated atrium requires more energy to pump blood and lose its elastic properties due to myocarditis, succumbs to deformational change, limiting Laplace’s law application in chronic mitral regurgitation and becomes larger with an increase in LA volume. For an LA diameter of 6 cm, the estimated volume of atrium exceeds 300 ml [33] . The increased LA volume may complicate thrombus formation due to potential stasis with thromboembolic events. The enlarged left atrium may compress the bronchial tree (widening of carinal angle (splaying of carina) > 120˚ as shown in Figure 3, stenosis of left main bronchus), left laryngeal nerve (hoarseness due to left vocal cord paralysis-Ortner’s syndrome [34] [35] ), inferior and middle lobes of right lung (atelectasis, infection) [36] , postero-basal part of left ventricle as in Figure 17 (hemodynamic instability) and esophagus (dysphagia). Isolated LV compression by Giant LA is defined as Type 1 [37] , both LV and bronchopulmonary compression is defined as Type II [38] Giant left atrium. Nigri reported a rare complication of giant left atrium, pushing the heart to the right side of the chest and mimicking as dextrocardia [39] [40] . The left atrium extends more to the left side forming the left atrial appendage which becomes convex in the left heart border (third Mogul sign) just below the pulmonary trunk when it is dilated (normally it should be flat or slightly concave) and makes a “4-bump” left heart borderas in Figure 3 and Figure 9 that includes the aortic knob, main pulmonary artery, left atrial appendage, and the left border of left ventricle. The LA size is larger in men than women [41] and in mitral stenosis, the body of left atrium is larger than normal and it never produces a giant left atrium, but giant left atrium with rheumatic mitral stenosis was reported and it may be associated with massive thrombus formation as shown in Figures 21-24.

3.3. Echocardiographic Features

Echocardiography is an excellent, non-invasive technique for obtaining anatomical measurements and it is universally accepted to assess the left atrial size [42] , comparable to angiography. Since the left atrium is not a symmetrically shaped 3D structure, the linear dimensions widely used in clinical practice, shown to correlate with angiographic measurements but inaccurately represent the LA size. Expansion of the left atrium in the AP (anteroposterior) dimensions may be constrained by the thoracic cavity between the sternum and the spine. Predominant enlargement in the superior-inferior and medial-lateral dimensions will alter the LA geometry and the AP dimensions also may not be representative of LA size [43] . Kawazoe et al. proposed two echocardiographic criteria to define the giant left atrium [44] .

1) Large left atrium depicted by M-mode echocardiography with diameter > 65 mm.

2) Left ventricular posterobasal wall bent inward and lying between the dilated LA cavity and LV cavity. The length of postero-basal part of LV compressed by large LA ≥ 30 mm was defined as “giant left atrium” [45] as shown in Figure 17.

Cross sectional echocardiography is superior to M-mode echocardiography for measuring left atrial size [46] [47] and it allows the visualization of entire left atrium from different views [48] . The presence and extent of chamber dilatation could not be predicted by the use of a single dimension. In normal subjects, the SI (superior-inferior) dimension being the major axis and the ML (medial-lateral), AP (anteroposterior) dimensions are the minor axes, and the SI dimension is usually the largest among the left atrial diameters and it should include the measurements of all three dimensions to determine the presence and to measure the degree of LA dilatation.

The extreme dilatation of the left atrium is probably related to the jet of regurgitation (or insufficiency), a finding common to all as shown in Figure 12, the jet occupies the entire left atrium as in Figure 13 and a holosystolic pattern in color M-mode echocardiography as shown in Figure 14.

The balloon-like enlargement of the left atrium which occupied the whole of the posterior, right and left mediastinum and the rest of the heart looks like a “crown on a cushion” as shown in Figure 17 and Figure 18 in mixed mitral valve disease (both stenosis and regurgitation) as in Figure 19 and Figure 20. The LA enlargement was associated with spontaneous echo contrast in the left atrium [49] as shown in Figures 21-24. A relationship between LA enlargement and increased risk of stroke was first proposed in 1980’s [50] [51] . LA dilation leads to thinning and fibrosis of myocardial and conducting fibers [52] [53] and thereby results in electrical tissue inhomogeneity, disordered electrical activation and contractility. Every 5 mm increase in LA diameter increases the development of atrial fibrillation by 39% [54] or 4-fold increase in the risk of new AF (atrial fibrillation) with LA diameter > 50 mm [55] . Patients with atrial fibrillation, who usually have LA diameter > 45 mm and atrial enlargement may increase refractoriness to medical or electrical conversion of atrial fibrillation [56] into sinus rhythm due to the fibrotic and calcified degeneration of left atrial myocardium. Early cardioversion is avoided in presence of LA thrombus and appropriate anticoagulant therapy is instituted for 6 to 12 weeks and interventional treatments such as PTMC (percutaneous trnsluminal mitral commissurotomy) and CMC (closed mitral commissurotomy) are adopted only after reevaluation by echo. The incidence of LA thrombus among patients with mitral stenosis and atrial fibrillation varies from 7% - 38% and it is directly related to the size of left atrium [57] , but not all patients with giant left atrium have an associated thrombus formation [58] , the thrombus size also varies and this diversity may be due to local factors within the left atrium as shown in Table 2.

Profuse, dense SEC (spontaneous echo contrast) with its swirling pattern of increased echogenicity was shown in Movie in Figure 26 and sometimes, it becomes impossible to differentiate dense SEC from the underlying thrombus. A patient with giant left atrium due to rheumatic mitral valve disease with SEC was reported in 2012 [59] .

The LA calcification, originally described in 1898 and the first presentation of LA calcification was made by Oppenheimer in 1912 [60] . It is an uncommon complication of long-standing rheumatic valve disease and if heavy calcification was observed in the LA appendage, atrial free wall and the mitral valve apparatus with sparing of interatrial septum, it is termed as “porcelain atrium” [61] . Involve- ment of dense calcification to the interatrial septum as transmural calcification of entire left atrium is called as “coconut atrium” [66] and calcification of left atrium with pulmonary veins is called as “mold-like” calcification [67] . LA calcification is described as a high density ring encircling the left atrium on chest- X-ray and Harthome et al. [68] described its appearance as a C-shaped curvilinear density with the opening of the C lying anteriorly in the region of the mitral annulus. This condition is assumed to the end result of extensive rheumatic pancarditis and a classification scheme was proposed for LA calcification [69] as shown in Table 3 and the pathophysiological mechanism of LA calcification was shown in Table 4.

Massive calcification of left atrium, predominantly affects the woman (74%) and it took an average duration of 19.7 years (17 - 20 years) to become manifest in rheumatic mitral stenosis and resembled a coconut shell [70] . The term “coconut atrium” is misnomer to describe this condition and a complete opacification of giant left atrium with dense SEC seen as thrombus as shown in Figure 24, resembling a “coconut” as in Figure 25 and this condition is better termed as “coconut atrium” appropriately.

Table 2. Showing the local risk factors for thrombosis within the left atrium.

Table 3. Classification of LA calcification.

Table 4. Pathophysiological mechanisms for LA calcification.

3.4. Management

3.4.1. Medical Therapy

Giant left atrium increases the thromboembolic risk, despite anticoagulant therapy. A Giant left atrium is an indication for the initiation of anticoagulant therapy and they were anticoagulated with an International Normalized Ratio (INR) ranging between 2.5 and 3.5. Anticoagulants alone seem to be safe approach to reduce thrombosis [71] . However, such medications are not ideal for early use since several days are usually required to achieve the therapeutic INR. The response of an organized thrombus to an anticoagulant therapy may be unpredictable. The thrombus dissolves partially, the shed fragments results in embolization

during therapy and the severed thrombus may block the mitral orifice and causes sudden death [72] [73] . Despite anticoagulation with a direct thrombin inhibitor, the oral dabigatran, thrombus occurred in rheumatic mitral stenosis with atrial fibrillation [74] . The non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (NOAC)-rivaroxaban are effective alternative to warfarin for resolving thrombus in the left atrium in patients with atrial fibrillation [77] and the reported resolution rate by using vitamin K antagonist is 50% - 90%. Warfarin is often used for the prevention of thromboembolism in non-valvular atrial fibrillation, and anticoagulation with INR (international normalized ratio) ≥2 will reduce the occurrence of ischemic stroke and in-hospital mortality [78] .

Thrombolytic therapy is another option for treating the LA thrombus [79] and shown to be effective in patients with mitral prosthesis with thrombosis [80] . The effectiveness and risk of thrombolytics for an organized or partially organized thrombus or thrombi of long duration is not known clinically. Fragment shedding after resolution and detachment of a large LA thrombus if the stalk was dissolved first could occur after thrombolytic therapy. Before the initiation of thrombolytic therapy, echo characteristics of the thrombus must be carefully analyzed and a fresh, unorganized thrombus appears as homogenous, soft and mobile. A rebound thrombosis after discontinuing anticoagulant therapy was reported by Kadoi et al. [81] . Therefore, maintaining sufficient anticoagulation was crucial following thrombolytic therapy for LA thrombus.

3.4.2. Surgical Therapy

The aim of surgery in giant left atrium is to correct the mitral valve abnormalities, to treat compressive manifestations, to prevent thromboembolism and to revert atrial fibrillation into normal sinus rhythm [82] .

3.4.3. Mitral Valve Surgery

Two strategies had been applied as mitral valve surgery alone or mitral valve surgery with LA volume reduction. Some surgeons believe that the effect of rheumatic process on left atrial elastic fibers is irreversible, hence they tend to go only for mitral valve surgery without LA reduction and successful mitral valve surgery alone will result in decrease in LA size, volume and LA pressure.

LA Volume reduction is indicated for the presence of intracardiac or extracardiac compressive symptoms, thrombus with a history of thromboembolic events and prevents recurrent thrombosis by reducing intra-atrial stasis. The volume reduction may be classified into three categories:

a) Partial plication or resection of inferior atrial wall, the sites of plication include posterior-mitral annulus (para-annular), remaining inferior atrial wall, lateral to the left pulmonary vein and or between right and left pulmonary veins.

A new surgical procedure, para-annular plication of the left atrial wall was attempted to eliminate the compression of basal portion of the posterior wall of the left ventricle to minimize the paradoxical movement and to correct the abnormal direction of the plane of mitral valvular ring.

The Mercedes-plasty of the inferior wall a procedure described by Dzemeshkevich et al. [83] , combined GLA (giant left atrium)-plasty with preservation of mitral valve apparatus during MVR (mitral valve replacement) in which the inferior wall of left atrium between the four ostia of pulmonary veins is plicated.

Triangular resection of the inferior wall was described by Sinatra et al. [84] with an advantage to interrupt the wavelets circuits around the pulmonary veins as a beneficial effect of inhibiting the propagation of atrial fibrillation foci.

b) Partial plication or resection of both inferior and superior atrial walls [85] . Spiral resection of left atrial wall was introduced by Sugiki et al. in 2006 [86] .

c) Partial heart auto-transplantation [87] .

The co-existence of giant left atrium with mitral valve disease provide a significant risk factor in mitral valve surgery and surgical mortality ranging from 8% - 23%. The increased operative mortality is proportionately related to high pulmonary systolic pressure, but the intended benefits of reducing a giant left atrium include the elimination of symptoms and alleviating the pressure effects to the left ventricle, bronchus, lung parenchyma and reduction of early postoperative complications related to low cardiac output syndrome and respiratory complications. The simplest modality for size reduction is plication of inferior left atrial wall, but the plication of superior wall carries a high risk of bleeding and AV (atrio-ventricular) node blockade.

The plIcation may not necessary when the left atrial diameter is <80 mm and those group with giant left atrium (GLA) had compressive symptoms may receive LA plIcation with MVR [88] .

Cox-Maze procedure is a viable option to treat long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation in patients with giant left atrium. The aim of the procedure is to divide the macro-reentry circuits and to direct the electrical waves from the sinoatrial node to the atria and atrio-ventricular node. During the procedure, a number of incisions are made on the left and right atrium to form scar tissue, which does not conduct electricity and disrupts the path of abnormal electrical impulses. The scar tissue also prevents erratic electrical signals from recurring. After the incisions are made, the atrium is sewn together to allow it to hold blood and contract to push blood into the ventricle. Normal sinus rhythm had been reported to range from 67% to 98% [89] and the efficacy of Maze procedure in restoration of atrial contraction in giant left atrium and in those without it are compared after one year follow-up as normal sinus rhythm in ECG was 53% and 75%, regaining atrial contraction as appearance of A wave in pulsed Doppler with a peak velocity of at least 0.10 m/s was 20% and 50% respectively. The bigger the left atrium, the lower is the percent of restoration of sinus rhythm. More than 90% of patients with a preoperative LA size < 57.8 mm regained sinus rhythm by Maze procedure postoperatively [90] and when the LA diameter was <45 mm, atrial fibrillation was ablated in 100% of patients [91] , but when the diameter was >85 mm, the success rate was 0% [92] .

Scherer et al. showed that LA volume reduction concomitant with mitral valve surgery restored postoperative sinus rhythm [93] , but postoperative LA diameter was significantly smaller in patients who attained sinus rhythm by radiofrequency (RF) Maze procedure. Mitral valve surgery alone may not reduce the enlarged LA size and direct surgical management of giant left atrium will reduce the LA size, and the restoration of sinus rhythm in atrial size reduction was 77.3% whereas without reduction, it is only 61.1%.

If the thrombus is organized, surgery is indicated and surgical intervention may be a conservative modality in very large acute LA thrombus. Removal of an organized thrombus from the left atrium can be challenging especially when it is huge in size. The presence of dense adhesions and absence of cleavage plane make its removal difficult. Thrombectomy can be performed by an inverted T- shaped biatrial incision and the whole thrombus was completely removed intact. Under these circumstances, the residual organized material can be left. Lim and Colleagues suggested the use of autologous pericardial patch to cover these areas to avoid future thrombus formation [94] .

Calcification of left atrial wall constitutes a major complication and risk to mitral valve surgery due to difficulty in entering the left atrium. Massive calcification of LA wall can cause recurrent thrombosis despite the therapeutic anticoagulant level following a surgical thrombectomy [95] . LA calcification was progressed after mitral valve replacement despite there was no definite LA wall calcification at the time of surgery and it was due to previously formed rheumatic ulceration of the atrial wall as the origin of calcification and its progression.

Roberts et al. [96] reported that calcific deposits prevented the left atrium from dilating, decreased its compliance, and caused the elevated LA pressure to be transmitted to the pulmonary vessels and the right ventricle, leading to tricuspid insufficiency. Thus, if patients who had rheumatic heart disease and underwent mitral valve replacement, suffer right heart failure, extensive LA calcification should be considered.

Surgery should be considered as one option of the treatment for atrial calcification [97] . The accepted surgical treatment of LA calcification is a total endoatriectomy with mitral valve replacement. The interatrial septum serves as the surgical cleavage plane, since this area is noncalcified and is therefore exploited in order to prevent embolization and hemorrhage when a thrombus is present, but it is difficult to suture the calcified structures. The presence of coconut atrium (calcified interatrial wall) will significantly complicate surgery and in- creases the mortality. Mitral annular calcification may progress to liquefaction necrosis, referred to as “caseous necrosis” which can make mitral valve surgery very difficult [98] . Calcification of interatrial septum and caseous necrosis of mitral annulus could be potential contraindications to mitral valve surgery. Dense calcification of atrial wall can prevent visualization of the interior of the chamber so that intracavitary thrombus and the septum cannot be seen [99] . If there is evidence of complete transmural calcification, i.e., septum cannot be visualized by TEE (transesophageal echocardiography) and appears to be calcific by CT (computed tomography), suspect “coconut atrium” and it is impossible to incise. In such cases, the calcified endothelium on the atrial septum and the free wall of the left atrium was pealed off (endoatriectomy) and the rim of interatrial wall was reconstructed and closed with a bovine pericardium. Redo MVR was performed with endoatriectomy upon transeptal superior approach [100] .

3.5. Outcome

A report of De Sanctis, who consider patients with GLA (giant left atrium) to have a relatively benign course even when not operated upon [101] and in rare cases, the patients may remain asymptomatic. No attempt was made to diminish the size of the left atrium by plication or excision as advocated by Johnson [102] or Le Roux [103] . There does not seem to be sufficient evidence that this procedure is of benefit. Morbidity of GLA comes from compression of intracardiac and adjacent extracardiac structures. Tamura et al. [104] presented a case of severe mitral stenosis and regurgitation, undergone mitral valve replacement with left atrial volume reduction and showed relief of compression, improvement in respiratory function with a decrease in carinal angle in the immediate postoperative period.

The coexistence of giant left atrium significantly increases the operative mortality from 7% to 20% in mitral valve surgery. Surgical resection is the treatment of choice, even in asymptomatic patients, because of the risk of rupture, systemic embolism, heart failure, arrhythmias or extrinsic compression of trachea or esophagus [105] and the surgeons should consider the risks and beneficial effects of various surgical options when managing the patients with GLA (giant left atrium).

4. Conclusion

Long-standing mitral valve disease is associated with enlargement of left atrium as a compensatory mechanism with a reported incidence of 19%. Giant left atrium is seen in only 3% - 4% of patients and such a low incidence is probably related to an early development of pulmonary hypertension, its subsequent effect on right ventricular output, the pressure and volume overload in the left atrium are reduced. A giant thrombosed left atrium resembling as a “coconut” as in Figure 24, the largest one reported in the literature as in Figure 23, was found by 2D transthoracic echocardiography at this hospital in India.

Cite this paper

Muthiah, R. (2017) Rheumatic Giant Left Atrium―An Overview. Case Reports in Clinical Medicine, 6, 164- 195. https://doi.org/10.4236/crcm.2017.66017

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