Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Coexistence of coronary artery disease and cancer with both requiring surgical treatment at the same time is rare. A 52 year male undergoing elective coronary artery bypass grafting was incidentally discovered to have a large soft tissue mass of variable consiste...

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Main Authors: Ganti Somsekhar, Duthie David JR, Kaul Pankaj, Ramnath Radhika
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2009-02-01
Series:Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
Online Access:http://www.cardiothoracicsurgery.org/content/4/1/7
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spelling doaj-752aa8c4d9a34ea1aa6f8fec2bcf35352020-11-24T21:42:57ZengBMCJournal of Cardiothoracic Surgery1749-80902009-02-0141710.1186/1749-8090-4-7Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcomaGanti SomsekharDuthie David JRKaul PankajRamnath Radhika<p>Abstract</p> <p>Coexistence of coronary artery disease and cancer with both requiring surgical treatment at the same time is rare. A 52 year male undergoing elective coronary artery bypass grafting was incidentally discovered to have a large soft tissue mass of variable consistency with cartilaginous elements arising from the right costal margin and adjoining ribs by a broad attachment and protruding into right pleural cavity. Frozen section suggested it to be either a chondrosarcoma or a teratoma. A wide excision of the mass with the adjoining muscle and periosteum along with quadruple coronary artery bypass grafting was done. This report is unusual on account of a) being the first reported case in world literature of concomitant excision of chondrosarcoma and coronary artery bypass grafting and b) the conservative management of the incidentally discovered chondrosarcoma by wide excision rather than chest wall resection with no local recurrence to date. Pathology of chondrosarcoma, in particular, and various management strategies when coronary artery disease and cancer coexist, in general, is discussed.</p> http://www.cardiothoracicsurgery.org/content/4/1/7
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ganti Somsekhar
Duthie David JR
Kaul Pankaj
Ramnath Radhika
spellingShingle Ganti Somsekhar
Duthie David JR
Kaul Pankaj
Ramnath Radhika
Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
author_facet Ganti Somsekhar
Duthie David JR
Kaul Pankaj
Ramnath Radhika
author_sort Ganti Somsekhar
title Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
title_short Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
title_full Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
title_fullStr Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
title_full_unstemmed Coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
title_sort coronary artery bypass grafting and concomitant excision of chest wall chondrosarcoma
publisher BMC
series Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
issn 1749-8090
publishDate 2009-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Coexistence of coronary artery disease and cancer with both requiring surgical treatment at the same time is rare. A 52 year male undergoing elective coronary artery bypass grafting was incidentally discovered to have a large soft tissue mass of variable consistency with cartilaginous elements arising from the right costal margin and adjoining ribs by a broad attachment and protruding into right pleural cavity. Frozen section suggested it to be either a chondrosarcoma or a teratoma. A wide excision of the mass with the adjoining muscle and periosteum along with quadruple coronary artery bypass grafting was done. This report is unusual on account of a) being the first reported case in world literature of concomitant excision of chondrosarcoma and coronary artery bypass grafting and b) the conservative management of the incidentally discovered chondrosarcoma by wide excision rather than chest wall resection with no local recurrence to date. Pathology of chondrosarcoma, in particular, and various management strategies when coronary artery disease and cancer coexist, in general, is discussed.</p>
url http://www.cardiothoracicsurgery.org/content/4/1/7
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AT duthiedavidjr coronaryarterybypassgraftingandconcomitantexcisionofchestwallchondrosarcoma
AT kaulpankaj coronaryarterybypassgraftingandconcomitantexcisionofchestwallchondrosarcoma
AT ramnathradhika coronaryarterybypassgraftingandconcomitantexcisionofchestwallchondrosarcoma
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