The aim of this work was to investigate the effects of resecting a post-infarction left ventricular anterior aneurysm on the kinetics of the non-ischaemic inferior wall, remote from the healed lesion. Thirteen patients, with an anterior post-infarction aneurysm and a normal right coronary artery who underwent aneurysmectomy with endoventricular circular patch plasty reconstruction, had a complete haemodynamic study before and shortly after surgery. The shape of the left ventricle was quantitatively analysed by calculating the regional curvature at 90 points of the angiographic outlines (30 degrees right anterior oblique projection). Segmental wall motion was studied by means of the centreline method and by constructing pressure-length loops from the endocardial movement of 18 chords intersecting the left ventricular inferior contour and by simultaneously tracing the high-fidelity left ventricular pressure. Analysis of pressure-length regional loops showed a complex pattern of abnormal contraction and relaxation in the non-ischaemic inferior regions at baseline; after surgery such abnormalities decreased significantly and tended to revert to normal in many cases. Left ventricular shape in the inferior region was abnormal in 10/13 patients in that there was negative curvature at the interface between the aneurysm and the inferior wall that was corrected to positive after surgery. Regional inferior wall motion and global ejection fraction significantly improved after surgery in these 10 patients. The three patients whose global ejection fraction did not improve showed no inferior negative curvature pre-operatively, nor did they show an increase in inferior wall motion. The results indicate that regional function and shape in inferior, non-ischaemic regions, remote from an anterior aneurysm, are abnormal but potentially correctible if the abnormal mechanical burden imposed on the wall is relieved.
Aneurysmectomy with left ventricular (LV) patch plasty reconstruction for anterior post-infarction LV aneurysm is usually followed by favourable haemodynamic results. The aim of this work was to describe the changes in LV shape induced by the intervention and to correlate them to the pre-operative data and to the surgical results. Twenty-two patients submitted to aneurysmectomy with this technique underwent a haemodynamic study before and 10-15 days after the intervention. Segmental wall motion was studied by the centreline method. LV shape was analysed by calculating the regional curvature of angiographic outlines (RAO 30 degrees projection). Results showed an improvement in LV pump function in 17 patients, which appeared mainly due to increased systolic shortening of the inferior wall. The intervention-induced modifications of LV geometry were characterized by: (1) marked reduction in end-diastolic volume, (2) shift of the angiographic apex counterclockwise, towards the aortic corner, (3) disappearance of the rim with negative curvature corresponding to the infero-apical border of the aneurysm, where the inferior wall resumed a normal outward convexity. No significant difference was found between the pre-operative haemodynamic data of patients who improved after surgery and those who did not. The presence of a rim of negative curvature at the infero-apical border of the aneurysm was the only pre-operative sign with a predictive value for the surgical outcome.
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