Left ventricular thrombus complicating myocardial infarction was diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiography in 119 patients. The infarct site was anterior in 98 patients and inferior in 11. Systemic embolism occurred in 26 patients (stroke in 18, lower limb embolism in 7 and mesenteric embolism in 1). A protruding configuration of the thrombus was more common in the patients with embolism than in those without (23 [88%] of 26 versus 17 [18%] of 93) (p less than 0.01). Free mobility of the thrombus was found in 15 (58%) of 26 and 3 (3%) of 93 cases, respectively (p less than 0.01). In predicting embolism, protruding thrombus configuration had a sensitivity of 88% and a specificity of 82%, and positive and negative predictive accuracy was 57 and 96%, respectively. For free mobility of the thrombus, sensitivity was 58%, specificity 97%, positive predictive accuracy 85% and negative predictive accuracy 89%. In the 46 patients whose echocardiogram was obtained during the hospital admission for the index infarct, repeat echocardiograms were obtained during oral anticoagulant therapy. Twelve of these 46 patients had embolism and 2 of the 12 died. In seven of these patients, full dose oral anticoagulant therapy had been given before embolism occurred and in five it was started after an embolic event. The thrombus decreased in size or disappeared in six patients; in four the thrombus showed no change, and in two of these four emboli recurred despite anticoagulation. It is concluded that two-dimensional echocardiography may help delineate the embolic potential of left ventricular thrombus complicating myocardial infarction and may be of value in weighing the benefits and disadvantages of oral anticoagulant therapy.
SUMMARY A score of left ventricular segmental wall motion was used as a convenient rapid way to assess overall left ventricular function in acute myocardial infarction. Its success in risk stratification at admission was assessed by a blind review of cross sectional echocardiographic tape recordings from multiple acoustic windows. Sixty nine (20%) of the 345 patients died during hospital stay or within a one year follow up. The mean (SD) wall motion score in those who died was significantly higher than in those who survived (16-2 (5-9) vs 5*7 (3-9)). There were no differences between the group that died in hospital within three months of discharge and the group that died between three months and one year after discharge. Among the 31 patients who died in hospital, however, wall motion score was highest in 15 patients dying of cardiogenic shock (19 2 (4 2)). In 16 patients with lethal ruptures it was 13 5 (6-1). The nine patients with free wall ruptures had higher wall motion scores than those with ventricular septal rupture or papillary muscle rupture (15 7 (6 9) vs 8-5 (5 3)). Eight (3 3%) of 245 patients with a score < 10 died, compared with 61 (61 %) of 100 scoring > 10. The sensitivity of a score of > 10 in predicting death within one year was 88%, the specificity was 86%, the positive predictive value was 61 %,. and the negative predictive value was 97%. Because infarct size is an important prognostic indicator we undertook the present investigation to assess the prognostic value of infarct size assessed shortly after admission by a cross sectional echocardiographic wall motion score in a large representative group of patients with acute myocardial infarction. The primary end point was death during hospital stay and throughout a one year follow up.
Patients and methods
PATIENTS
In a prospective serial study of 96 patients with acute myocardial infarction, two dimensional echocardiography identified left ventricular thrombus in 18 patients. The majority of thrombi (15) developed within the first 4 days after admission. In three patients thrombi were identified for the first time 4 months after the acute episode. All 18 patients had received therapeutic anticoagulants on admission and had large anterior wall infarctions complicated by severe pump failure and motion abnormalities echocardiographically. None of the patients had systemic embolisation during the study period. Thus, left ventricular thrombus is a not uncommon though silent complication of acute anterior wall infarction even when patients receive therapeutic anticoagulants.
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