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. 2005 Jul;91(7):853. doi: 10.1136/hrt.2004.052142

“Sea anemones” on a degenerated bicuspid aortic valve

A C van der Wal 1, J J Kloek 1
PMCID: PMC1769016  PMID: 15958341

A 72 year old man was operated on for a severely stenotic (gradient 120 mm Hg) congenitally bicuspid aortic valve. The valve was replaced by a prosthetic valve and the resected leaflets were stored in formalin for routine pathologic analysis. Under formalin two beautiful sea anemone-like glistening white papillary tumours unfolded at the valvar surface, with all the features of papillary fibroelastomas (panels B and C). The tumours measured 5 mm and 9 mm, respectively.

When the valve leaflets were taken out of the formalin container, the fibroelastomas collapsed like sea anemones do at low tide (panel A, arrow); an image which corresponded with the aspect of the valves at the time of surgery.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

(A) Overview of resected valve tissue. Photo is of a “dry specimen”. Arrow indicates collapsed fibroelastomas. (B) Detail of leaflet with unfolded fibroelastomas. Photo is of a wet specimen (placed in water). (C) Histology of fibroelastoma showing cell-poor, elastin-rich (black) papillary structures (elastic van Gieson stain ×24).


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