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Left ventricular cardiac hemangioma in a patient with chronic heart failure.

Cardiac hemangiomas are rare benign tumors. Here, we report the case of a man in his 30s who had a cardiac hemangioma with no symptoms. He was being treated with β-blockers for chronic heart failure with hypertensive heart disease at Osaka Minato Central Hospital. Routine echocardiography revealed a mobile spherical mass in the left ventricle that had not been detected on echocardiography performed 4 months previously. Subsequently, the tumor was excised to prevent potential embolic events and was pathologically diagnosed as a cardiac hemangioma. This case demonstrates the relatively rapid progress of a cardiac hemangioma regardless of β-blocker administration, which is occasionally used for the treatment of hemangiomas. The efficacy of β-blockers in treating cardiac hemangiomas may vary according to the type of β-blocker. Echocardiography is useful in screening and follow-up of cardiac hemangiomas; however, additional imaging modalities are needed for differential diagnosis.

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