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Summary: Ventricular aneurysms are circumscribed, thinwalled fibrous, noncontractile outpouchings of the ventricle. The majority are apically located, true aneurysms of the left ventricle (LV) that occur as a consequence of transmural myociudid infarction (MI). The precursor of aneurysm formation appears to be infarct expansion early after acute MI and occurrencc generally relates to infarct size. The presence of underlying hypertension and the use of steroids and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents may promote aneurysm formation. The clinical sequelae include congestive heart failure (CHF), thromboenibolism, angina pectoris, and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Late rupture is a particular complication of false aneurysms in which the pericardium is the aneurysm wall. The diagnosis may be suspected by the clinical finding of a diffuse, pansystolic apical thrust, persistent ST-segment elevation on the electrocardiogram, and distortion of the cardiac silhouette on chesl x-ray. This can be confirmed using echocardiography, radionuclide ventriculography, and cardiac catheterization. The latter has the additional advantage of being able to delineate the coronary anatomy. Management involves prevention, specific therapy for the various clinical manifestations, and surgery. Therapeutic interventions with thrombolytic agents, aspirin, heparin, and beta blockers that are applied early in the evolution of an MI may limit infarction size, thereby reducing the tendency toward infarct expansion and aneurysm formation. Patients with mild CHF can usually be controlled with the standard combination of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, diuretics, and digoxin. Thromboembolism is best prevented by anticoagulation with warfarin for at least 3 months after the acute MI. The choice of pharmacotherapy for ventricular tachyarrhythmias should be guided by electrophysiologic studies. The treatment of patients with anginapec- toris utilizes conventional therapeutic modalities. Refractory angina and high-risk coronary anatomic subsets have replaced CHF as the commonest indications for surgical intervention in recent studies. In these patients, aneurysmectomy is often performed as an aside to the primary revascularization procedure. Although aneurysmectomy may improve the functional status and ejection fraction of some patients with CHF, its effect on prognosis is less certain. The prognostic advantage of surgery appears to be related more to coronary revascularization than to the aneurysm resection per se.
Summary: Ventricular aneurysms are circumscribed, thinwalled fibrous, noncontractile outpouchings of the ventricle. The majority are apically located, true aneurysms of the left ventricle (LV) that occur as a consequence of transmural myociudid infarction (MI). The precursor of aneurysm formation appears to be infarct expansion early after acute MI and occurrencc generally relates to infarct size. The presence of underlying hypertension and the use of steroids and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents may promote aneurysm formation. The clinical sequelae include congestive heart failure (CHF), thromboenibolism, angina pectoris, and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Late rupture is a particular complication of false aneurysms in which the pericardium is the aneurysm wall. The diagnosis may be suspected by the clinical finding of a diffuse, pansystolic apical thrust, persistent ST-segment elevation on the electrocardiogram, and distortion of the cardiac silhouette on chesl x-ray. This can be confirmed using echocardiography, radionuclide ventriculography, and cardiac catheterization. The latter has the additional advantage of being able to delineate the coronary anatomy. Management involves prevention, specific therapy for the various clinical manifestations, and surgery. Therapeutic interventions with thrombolytic agents, aspirin, heparin, and beta blockers that are applied early in the evolution of an MI may limit infarction size, thereby reducing the tendency toward infarct expansion and aneurysm formation. Patients with mild CHF can usually be controlled with the standard combination of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, diuretics, and digoxin. Thromboembolism is best prevented by anticoagulation with warfarin for at least 3 months after the acute MI. The choice of pharmacotherapy for ventricular tachyarrhythmias should be guided by electrophysiologic studies. The treatment of patients with anginapec- toris utilizes conventional therapeutic modalities. Refractory angina and high-risk coronary anatomic subsets have replaced CHF as the commonest indications for surgical intervention in recent studies. In these patients, aneurysmectomy is often performed as an aside to the primary revascularization procedure. Although aneurysmectomy may improve the functional status and ejection fraction of some patients with CHF, its effect on prognosis is less certain. The prognostic advantage of surgery appears to be related more to coronary revascularization than to the aneurysm resection per se.
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