Aetiology and Clinical Profile of Giant Left Atrium – An Observational Study

Authors

  • A K M Monwarul Islam Associate Professor of Cardiology, NICVD, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Abdullah AS Majumder Cardiovascular Imaging and Research Foundation, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Mohammad Ullah Associate Professor of Cardiology, Dhaka Medical College, Dhaka, Bangladesh https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1813-3701
  • Md Toufiqur Rahman Professor of cardiology, Col. Malek Medical College, Manikganj, Bangladesh
  • Md Khalequzzaman Professor of Cardiology, Sir Salimullah Medical College,Dhaka,Bangladesh
  • Md Kabiruzzaman Professor of cardiology, National Heart Foundation and Research Institute, Dhaka,Bangladesh
  • Sujit Kumar Ghosh Department of Cardiology, Dhaka Medical College, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Shovan Rahman Department of Cardiology, NICVD, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Bijoy Dutta Assistant Professor, Department of Cardiology, NICVD, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Shahriar Azad Assistant Professor, Department of Cardiology, NICVD, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Tanveer Ahmad Department of Cardiology, United Hospital Ltd., Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Shahriar Kabir Assistant Professor, Department of Cardiology, M Abdur Rahim Medical College, Dinajpur, Bangladesh
  • AbuI Hasan Muhammad Bashar Associate Professor, Department of Vascular Surgery, NICVD, Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Mezbah Uddin Ahmed Department of Cardiology, NICVD, Dhaka, Bangladesh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/cardio.v15i2.65630

Keywords:

Left Atrium, Transthoracic Echocardiography, Thrombus, Left atrial volume index

Abstract

Background: The predominant cause of giant left atrium (GLA) is rheumatic mitral valvular disease. GLA is commonly defined echocardiographically by measuring the left atrial diameter (LAD). In the context of changing epidemiology of rheumatic heart disease (RHD) globally, and introduction of left atrial volume index (LAVI), the aetiology of GLA and utility of LAVI for defining GLA may be necessary.

Methods: The prospective observational study was carried out at a dedicated tertiary care cardiac centre of a developing country to know the aetiology and clinical pattern of GLA over 8 years. GLA was defined echocardiographically as a left atrium (LA) having a diameter ≥80 mm in the left parasternal long-axis view. Follow-up was made over the telephone.  

Results: Thirty cases of GLA were diagnosed over 8 years from 2013 to 2021. Twenty two were due to rheumatic heart disease (RHD), 7 due to MVP, and 1 due to flail anterior mitral leaflet. Mean LAD was 92.13 ± 16.72 mm, and the mean LAVI was 288.77 ± 134.40 ml/m2. LA thrombus was present in 5 patients, 6 had spontaneous echo contrast (SEC) in LA, 2 had both LA thrombus and SEC. Mean follow-up was 0.99 ± 1.06 years. Out of 15 patients, 5 died, while 10 were alive. Mean survival was 1.8 ± 1.17 years, ranging from less than 1 year to 4 years.

Conclusion: RHD continues to be the predominant cause of GLA; however, MVP is also important. The cut-off value of LAVI for defining GLA needs further study.

Cardiovasc j 2023; 15(2): 151-158

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Published

2023-04-26

How to Cite

Islam, A. K. M. M. ., Majumder, A. A. ., Ullah, M. ., Rahman, M. T. ., Khalequzzaman, M., Kabiruzzaman, M., Ghosh, S. K. ., Rahman, S. ., Dutta, B. ., Azad, S., Ahmad, T. ., Kabir, S. ., Bashar, A. H. M., & Ahmed, M. U. (2023). Aetiology and Clinical Profile of Giant Left Atrium – An Observational Study. Cardiovascular Journal, 15(2), 151–158. https://doi.org/10.3329/cardio.v15i2.65630

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Original Articles