@article{oai:nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002695, author = {Yoshimura, Satoshi and Kawano, Hiroaki and Minami, Takako and Tsuneto, Akira and Nakata, Tomoo and Koga, Seiji and Ikeda, Satoshi and Hayashi, Tomayoshi and Maemura, Koji}, issue = {22}, journal = {Internal Medicine}, month = {Nov}, note = {Calcified amorphous tumor (CAT) is a rare, non-neoplastic tumor involving calcium deposition in amorphous materials. Although its etiology is unknown, cases have frequently been reported in patients with hemodialysis for chronic kidney disease. We herein describe a case of cardiac CAT in a 64-year-old woman who had been on hemodialysis for diabetic nephropathy for 20 years, and the findings of the present patient, in association with the findings of previous case reports, suggest that end-stage renal disease seems to play an important role in the onset of CAT, especially in CAT formation at the mitral annulus, which appears to differ from CAT occurring at other sites., Internal Medicine, 56(22), pp.3057-3060; 2017}, pages = {3057--3060}, title = {Cardiac Calcified Amorphous Tumors in a Patient with Hemodialysis for Diabetic Nephropathy}, volume = {56}, year = {2017} }