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A full-term male newborn presented on the seventh day of life with breathlessness and refusal of feeds for 3 days. The baby was tachypnoeic and had respiratory distress, but was not cyanotic. Oxygen saturation was 90% on room air. On examination, there was a systolic murmur, cardiomegaly and features of heart failure. Chest X-ray showed bilateral lung congestion and cardiomegaly. Transthoracic echo was done, which showed multiple homogeneous non-pedunculated echogenic masses in both ventricles and interventricular septum. On apical four-chamber view, the mass in the left ventricle appeared like a ‘foetus in utero’ (figure 1A–C, online supplementary video 1). Parasternal short-axis view revealed a patent ductus arteriosus (figure 1D). A diagnosis of cardiac rhabdomyomas was made.
Rhabdomyomas are the most common primary cardiac tumour in infants and children. They can exist entirely intramural or extend into the atrial or ventricular cavities. They are quite echogenic and are multiple homogeneous and well circumscribed. In contrast to thrombi, myxomas and vascular tumours, rhabdomyomas do not have echolucent areas indicative of haemorrhage or areas of calcification.
Footnotes
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Contributors GR made substantial contributions to conception and design, acquisition of data or analysis and interpretation of data. KTS drafted the article and revised it critically for important intellectual content. MNK is responsible for the final approval of the version to be published.
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.