Cardiac hydatid disease is rare. Many patients are asymptomatic, hence cardiac involvement is often discovered incidentally. Diagnosis is also difficult because of a long period between parasitic infection and the manifestation of disease. Rupture of a cardiac cyst is a serious complication. Diagnosis of cardiac hydatid cysts is often made using transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) provides details of the cysts. We present the cases of 3 patients with nonspecific symptoms of their endemic parasitic disease. The results of sonographic examinations in all patients strongly suggested the presence of cardiac hydatid cysts. One patient had a cyst in the external surface of the left ventricular apical-lateral wall visualized with TTE and TEE. Parasitic serology was negative. She underwent surgery, which confirmed a cyst located in the pericardium, and then was treated with albendazole. Another patient had a cyst in the left ventricle demonstrated by TTE and TEE and confirmed with serology. Color Doppler sonography verified that her cardiac cyst was in communication with the left ventricle. She was not a surgical candidate and was treated with albendazole. The final patient had a septated cyst in the media basilar portion of the interventricular septum demonstrated using TTE, and CT. He refused surgical treatment and albendazole was prescribed. Chest radiographs in 3 patients failed to show the cysts, and serology in 1 patient failed to indicate a hydatid cyst. Follow-up at 1-2 years revealed no recurrence in any patient. In all 3 cases, cysts could be visualized from the subcostal view via echocardiography. Imaging is critical for the early diagnosis, assessment, and follow-up of patients with this disease.
Copyright 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.