Safe Resection of a Giant Mediastinal Liposarcoma with Severe Cardiac Compression
Kazuhiro Mizota, Mikihiro Kohno, Fumihiko Kinoshita, Keigo Ozono, Tomoyoshi Takenaka, Tomoharu Yoshizumi

TL;DR
A rare case of a large mediastinal tumor causing severe heart compression was successfully surgically removed with careful planning.
Contribution
Demonstrates successful surgical resection of a giant mediastinal liposarcoma with VA-ECMO standby in an oncological emergency.
Findings
Surgical resection of a giant dedifferentiated liposarcoma was successfully performed with stable hemodynamics.
Postoperative recovery was uneventful with no recurrence after one year.
VA-ECMO was not required during surgery despite initial concerns for hemodynamic instability.
Abstract
Dedifferentiated liposarcomas of the mediastinum are exceedingly rare, and surgical resection is the primary treatment of choice. Mediastinal mass syndrome (MMS) is an oncological emergency characterized by compression or invasion of the heart, great vessels, or trachea by a large mediastinal tumor, particularly during the induction of anesthesia. We report a case of a giant dedifferentiated liposarcoma in the anterior mediastinum, surgically resected due to severe cardiac compression and presenting as an oncological emergency. A 70-year-old male presented with palpitations, generalized fatigue, and chest tightness. Chest radiography revealed an enlarged mediastinal shadow, prompting referral to our hospital. CT revealed a rapidly growing, giant anterior mediastinal tumor measuring 22 × 14.5 × 8.5 cm. The mass caused significant cardiac compression and extended into the pleural cavity.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac tumors and thrombi · Sarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment · Soft tissue tumor case studies
