To study the incidence of left-ventricular thrombosis after transmural myocardial infarction, we performed serial two-dimensional echocardiography in 70 consecutive patients. Thirty-five patients had inferior-wall infarction: none had a left-ventricular thrombus. The other 35 had anterior-wall infarction: 12 had left-ventricular thrombi. Thrombi were diagnosed an average of five days after the infarction (range, one to 11 days). All patients with left-ventricular thrombi had severe apical-wall-motion abnormalities (akinesis or dyskinesis). Twenty-six of the 35 patients with anterior infarctions had apical akinesis or dyskinesis on echocardiography; left-ventricular thrombi developed in 12 of these 26 (46 per cent). We conclude that patients with severe apical-wall-motion abnormalities during acute transmural anterior myocardial infarction are at high risk for left-ventricular thrombosis. This high-risk group can be identified before the development of left-ventricular thrombi. Patients with inferior infarction or anterior infarction without a severe apical-wall-motion abnormality are at low risk.
We sought to determine whether an association existed between the echocardiographic appearance of left ventricular thrombi and systemic embolization. We reviewed the clinical and echocardiographic characteristics of 60 patients who underwent diagnostic two-dimensional echocardiography for left ventricular thrombi. Sixteen of these 60 patients (27%) had evidence of systemic embolization. Multiple echocardiographic characteristics of left ventricular thrombi were analyzed, including mobility, shape, heterogeneity, echo density, layering, central echo lucency, presence within an aneurysm, and association with low-density swirling echoes. Incidence of embolization was significantly higher in patients with thrombi that were mobile or protruded into the left ventricular cavity (p < .002 and p < .05, respectively). Bayesian analysis indicated that the pretest likelihood for embolization was 27% and increased in the presence of mobility, central echo lucency, and protrusion to 60%, 50%, and 40%, respectively. A stepwise regression indicated that mobility was the first and protrusion the second most helpful echocardiographic characteristic in identifying patients with embolic phenomena. Clinical features were of less help in identifying the risk for embolization of patients with left ventricular thrombi. Nine of 31 patients (29%) with recent myocardial infarction (less than 3 weeks) had emboli in contrast to five of 26 patients (19%) with remote myocardial infarction (greater than 3 weeks) (p = NS). The three patients without infarction had congestive cardiomyopathy and two had emboli.Circulation 70. No. 4. 588-5989 1984. LEFT ventricular mural thrombus is a common postmortem finding in patients with acute myocardial infarction, '-5 remote myocardial infarction, 1-' left ventricular aneurysm,46 and congestive cardiomyopathy.5 7 Clinical or pathologic evidence for embolization from left ventricular thrombus is much less common.'-' Since it appears that the incidence of embolic events can be reduced by therapeutic anticoagulation,j'9 it is important to identify patients with left ventricular thrombi so that therapeutic intervention can be considered.In the past, the diagnosis of left ventricular thrombus was based on contrast ventriculographic results or inferred only after clinical evidence for an embolic
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