Left ventricular aneurysm: Difference between revisions

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==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*Can be asymptomatic
*May be asymptomatic
*History of [[myocardial infarction]]
*History of [[myocardial infarction]]
*Angina, shortness of breath/dyspnea on exertion, [[CHF]] symptoms
*Angina
*Mitral regurgitation murmur, S3/S4
*Shortness of breath or dyspnea on exertion
*female>male
*[[CHF]] symptoms
*Mitral regurgitation murmur
*S3/S4 heart sounds
*More common in women than men


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==

Revision as of 17:03, 17 March 2019

Background

  • Thin or fibrotic ventricular wall
    • Muscle may be absent or necrotic
    • Akinetic or dyskinetic wall (paradoxical ballooning)

Causes

  • Majority
    • Healed transmural MI (anterior or inferior most common)
  • Rare

Clinical Features

  • May be asymptomatic
  • History of myocardial infarction
  • Angina
  • Shortness of breath or dyspnea on exertion
  • CHF symptoms
  • Mitral regurgitation murmur
  • S3/S4 heart sounds
  • More common in women than men

Differential Diagnosis

ST Elevation

Evaluation

  • CXR: prominent left heart border, calcified aneurysm
  • TTE, LV angiography, cardiac MRI
  • ECG: persistent characteristic ST elevation after MI
  • Strongly suspect STEMI if:
    • Symptomatic
    • No q waves present (LV aneurysm typically produces significant q waves)
    • Evolving changes on serial ECG
    • Reciprocal changes
  • Consider two rules to differentiate[1]
    • Rule 1
      • If (Sum of T-wave amplitudes in V1-V4) divided by (Sum of QRS amplitudes in V1-V4) > 0.22
      • Suggestive of STEMI, with ~87% accuracy
    • Rule 2
      • If any lead in V1-V4 has T-wave amplitude to QRS amplitude ratio > 0.35
      • Suggestive of STEMI, with ~89% accuracy

Management

  • Be sure to rule out acute or subacute acute coronary syndrome

Medical Therapy (first line)

  • Afterload reduction (ACEI)
  • Antianginal (Nitro)
  • Anticoagulation (if LV thrombus)

Surgical Therapy

  • Aneurysmectomy and CABG (and possible valve repair) if ventricular arrhythmias and/or HF refractory to medical therapy

Disposition

Complications

  • Heart failure (LV aneurysm steals CO)
  • Angina (increased O2 demand)
  • Ventricular arrhythmias (LV stretch/scarring)
  • LV thrombus (50% of time), arterial embolism (stroke)
  • LV rupture (rarely occurs in mature LVA because of dense fibrosis)

See Also

References

  1. Klein LR, Shroff GR, Beeman W, and Smith SW. Electrocardiographic criteria to differentiate acute anterior ST-elevation myocardial infarction from left ventricular aneurysm. Am J Emerg Med. 2015 Jun;33(6):786-90.