1.A Case of Mitral Stenosis due to Pannus Formation after Mitral Valve Plasty
Tatsuya MIYANAGA ; Ichiro MATSUMARU ; Shun NAKAJI ; Kazuki HISATOMI ; Yuichi TASAKI ; Akihiko TANIGAWA ; Shunsuke TAGUCHI ; Yutaro RYU ; Yugo MURAKAMI ; Takashi MIURA
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2024;53(4):203-207
A 73-year-old man had been followed up in our hospital after surgery for mitral regurgitation. At the age of 67, he underwent mitral valve plasty through a right mini-thoracotomy approach for atrial functional mitral regurgitation at our hospital. The mean trans-mitral pressure gradient was 5 mmHg after surgery but no heart failure symptoms were observed. At the age of 72, he began to notice fatigue during exertion. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed that the mitral valve regurgitation was controlled to a trace level, but the mean trans-mitral pressure gradient increased to 10 mmHg. Transesophageal echocardiography and contrast-enhanced cardiac computed tomography revealed the restricted opening of the mitral valve and pannus formation around the prosthetic ring. We thus diagnosed mitral stenosis due to pannus overgrowth. He underwent pannus excision and removal of the artificial ring. Postoperative echocardiography revealed that the mean trans-mitral pressure gradient was reduced to 3 mmHg and no residual mitral regurgitation was observed. He was discharged on postoperative day 11 with no major symptoms. He was in New York Heart Association functional class I at 1 year after the surgery and continues to be an outpatient.
2.A Case of Bleeding Advanced Gastric Cancer Treated with Transcatheter Arterial Embolization (TAE) after Ineffective Palliative Radiotherapy (RT)
Yutaro TASAKI ; Kenji MAKINO ; Otsuka TETSUHIRO ; Daisuke NAKAMURA ; Kei KITAMURA ; Atsushi MIYAZAKI ; Toshifumi FUJIMOTO ; Sayuri SUGIO ; Shoko IMAMURA
Palliative Care Research 2022;17(4):141-145
A 67-year-old man with Stage IV gastric cancer (cT3N2M1) received chemotherapy. However, he had progressive disease and then, received palliative care. One day, he was admitted for difficulty in body movement. He had severe anemia (Hb: 3.4 g/dl) caused by tumor bleeding and needed frequent blood transfusions. Palliative radiotherapy (RT) was conducted to control the bleeding. However, hemostasis was not achieved despite daily palliative RT and blood transfusions. Gastrointestinal endoscopy showed oozing blood from gastric cancer and his Hb levels dropped to 2.8 g/dl. Transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) with gelatin sponge was performed as salvage therapy. TAE was effective and his Hb levels improved to 8.0 g/dl, and he was discharged from the hospital. RT is an effective modality for gastric bleeding control in gastric cancer. However, salvage therapy is sometimes needed but difficult to conduct. TAE was effective salvage therapy in this case.