Autopsy case of right ventricular rhabdomyoma in tuberous sclerosis complex
[Display omitted] •A genetic disorder, tuberous sclerosis complex causes hamartomas in several organs.•This autopsy case is a right ventricular rhabdomyoma in tuberous sclerosis complex.•The rhabdomyoma occluded the right ventricular cavity, disrupting cardiac function.•Nonsense mutation was detecte...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Legal medicine (Tokyo, Japan) Japan), 2019-02, Vol.36, p.37-40 |
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•A genetic disorder, tuberous sclerosis complex causes hamartomas in several organs.•This autopsy case is a right ventricular rhabdomyoma in tuberous sclerosis complex.•The rhabdomyoma occluded the right ventricular cavity, disrupting cardiac function.•Nonsense mutation was detected in the TSC1-binding domain of the TSC2 gene.
Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a genetic multisystem disorder characterized by widespread hamartomas in several organs, including the brain, heart, skin, eyes, kidney, lung, and liver. Rhabdomyoma is the most common cardiac tumor diagnosed in fetuses, neonates and infants, and is closely linked to TSC. Here we describe an autopsy case of right ventricular rhabdomyoma in TSC. The deceased was a 3-month-old male infant, and TSC with a cardiac tumor had been diagnosed before his death. Since the cardiac tumor had not been physically blocking the blood flow, he had not undergone surgical intervention. At autopsy, the patient’s height was 62 cm and his body weight was 6 kg. The heart weighed 37.3 g and the right ventricle was filled with the tumor. The tumor measured 2.1 cm × 1.6 cm, being a fusion of multiple tumors with several attachment sites to the myocardium. Histologically, the tumor was diagnosed as a rhabdomyoma, and was positive for mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). The brain weighed 795.0 g, without hydrocephalus. The cut surface of the brain revealed multiple cortical tubers and subependymal nodules. Through screening for the TSC1 (hamartin) and TSC2 (tuberin) genes, a nonsense mutation, c.1108C>T:p.Gln370∗, was detected in the TSC2 gene. Immediate cause of death was determined to be ventricular obstruction by a cardiac rhabdomyoma with insidious growth. This case highlights the need for forensic pathologists to perform a complete autopsy to determine the cause of sudden death with cardiac tumor, including genetic examination. |
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ISSN: | 1344-6223 1873-4162 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.legalmed.2018.10.001 |