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Diagnostic dilemma: Man's autopsy reveals unexpected 'boomerang-shaped' structure in his heart

2026-02-04 11:00
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Diagnostic dilemma: Man's autopsy reveals unexpected 'boomerang-shaped' structure in his heart

A surprising autopsy marked the first time a bony, supportive structure was documented in an adult human heart, medical examiners reported.

  1. Health
  2. Heart & Circulation
Diagnostic dilemma: Man's autopsy reveals unexpected 'boomerang-shaped' structure in his heart

Features By Lauren Schneider published 4 February 2026

A surprising autopsy marked the first time a bony, supportive structure was documented in an adult human heart, medical examiners reported.

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Illustration of the human heart in a X-rayed chest The elusive "os cordis" may form to compensate for heart issues, per the case report. (Image credit: SCIEPRO/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY viaGetty Images)
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The deceased: A 39-year-old man in the United States

The autopsy findings: Medical examiners evaluated the man after a deadly fight, during which a stab wound had punctured a vein in his lungs. They noted that the man's heart was slightly enlarged and that he had moderate atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (CAD) in two vessels. CAD is caused by plaque buildup in the walls of arteries that lead to the heart.

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They identified this structure as the os cordis — a "cardiac bone" rarely, if ever, seen in humans.

What makes the case unique: The os cordis has long been observed in nonhuman mammals, including ruminants such as cows and camels. In animals, it is believed to support the cardiac valves that direct the flow of blood within the heart.

The structure was only recently described in primates, in a report published in 2020, just five years before the case study described above. In that 2020 report, scientists examined 16 chimpanzee hearts and found that three contained an os cordis. Those three chimps also had heart-tissue scarring, leading the researchers to suggest that the development of the bony structure might have been linked to such tissue damage.

Also in 2020, a similar structure was described in seven humans by Dr. Jorge Trainini, a cardiac surgeon and professor at the National University of Avellaneda in Argentina. He and his co-authors dubbed their discovery the "cardiac fulcrum," emphasizing its proposed role in stabilizing heart muscles as they pump against the forces of gravity.

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They reported that, unlike the os cordis they saw in cow hearts, the adult human fulcrum was made of cartilage and tendon, not bone. That said, in the team's own analysis, they found that a heart from a 10-year-old did contain bone tissue, and they suggested that the structure might lose its bony nature with age. (The 10-year-old had cardiomyopathy, or disease of the heart muscle, and had undergone a heart transplant. The bony tissue was found in the explanted heart.)

Trainini told Live Science in an interview that the os cordis and the cardiac fulcrum are the same structure. But the case report authors disagreed. They acknowledged Trainini's previous findings, but they maintained that the structure they found in the 39-year-old man was distinct because it was made of bone.

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However, the case report authors come to a similar conclusion as Trainini, stating that such a structure may be more common among humans than is currently recognized. They suggested that, since they found the os cordis during a dissection of the heart tissue that was not standard for an autopsy, the feature may typically go unnoticed.

Tranini went so far as to argue that all humans likely have a cardiac fulcrum based on his subsequent investigations of around 100 human hearts.

Though the case report authors didn't know the man's full medical history, they noted that the formation of an os cordis might be linked to his apparent cardiac disease. It's known that age and disease can influence this structure in other animals, too, they added.

For more intriguing medical cases, check out our Diagnostic Dilemma archives.

TOPICS Diagnostic dilemma Lauren SchneiderLauren SchneiderLive Science Contributor

Lauren Schneider is a health and science journalist currently pursuing a master's degree from the Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program at New York University. She earned a bachelor's degree in neuroscience at The University of Texas at Austin prior to becoming a writer.  In her spare time, you can find Lauren watching movies, swimming, editing Wikipedia, or spending time with Lucy, her impossibly cute black cat.

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