Question 1633
{"accessible":false,"alternatives":[{"id":8131,"text":"cardiac angiosarcoma"},{"id":8132,"text":"cardiac myxoma"},{"id":8133,"text":"cardiac rhabdomyoma"},{"id":8134,"text":"cardiac thrombus"}],"archived":false,"correctAlternativeId":8131,"explanation":"\u003cp\u003eThe question describes features are of a malignant cardiac tumor (right sided, pericardial effusion, invasion). These features would go against benign tumors such as myxoma and rhabdomyoma and would suit a malignant tumor.\u003c/p\u003e","id":1633,"imageUrl":null,"imageAttribution":null,"imageAttributionCaseInfo":null,"firstQuestionPath":"/questions/1633","nextQuestionPath":"/articles/cardiac-rhabdomyoma/questions/1176","relatedArticles":[{"id":12184,"title":"Cardiac angiosarcoma","link":"/articles/cardiac-angiosarcoma?lang=us"},{"id":1051,"title":"Cardiac myxoma","link":"/articles/cardiac-myxoma?lang=us"}],"alsoUsedIn":[{"id":258,"kind":"Course","title":"Incidental cardiac findings on general CT","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/courses/incidental-cardiac-findings-on-general-ct"},{"id":661,"kind":"Course","title":"Lectures by Naveen Sharma - page 661","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/courses/lectures-by-naveen-sharma/pages/661"},{"id":661,"kind":"Course","title":"Chest Imaging Lecture Package - page 661","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/courses/chest-imaging-lecture-package/pages/661"},{"id":661,"kind":"Course","title":"Radiopaedia 2020 - Lectures Only - page 661","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/courses/radiopaedia-2020-exclusive/pages/661"},{"id":661,"kind":"Course","title":"Chest Lectures - page 661","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/courses/chest-lectures/pages/661"},{"id":661,"kind":"Course","title":"2020 Virtual Conference Private Use - page 661","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/courses/2020-virtual-conference-private-use/pages/661"},{"id":903,"kind":"RestrictedPage","title":"Page 903 (in no courses)","link":"https://radiopaedia.org/admin/restricted_pages/903"}],"stem":"\u003cp\u003eA 75 year old lady has a CT after a history of breathlessness. There is a mass within the right atrium related to the free wall. The epicardial fat plane is lost and there is a pericardial effusion. Which is most likely?\u003c/p\u003e","menuLinks":[{"text":"Report problem with question","url":"https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfO3soWYhOjJ7yErSysyCe5V4A1CqW7WK3rDA7MtAkecMGqNw/viewform?entry.1624461248\u0026entry.553583435=https://radiopaedia.org/questions/1633"}],"attemptsPercentages":[{"alternativeId":"8133","percentage":4},{"alternativeId":"8134","percentage":5},{"alternativeId":"8131","percentage":77},{"alternativeId":"8132","percentage":14}],"promptToLogin":false,"questionManager":false,"articleId":"cardiac-rhabdomyoma"}