Prognostic Considerations in the Management of Left Ventricular Aneurysms

1977 
Abstract This report summarizes a four-year experience with 60 patients who had left ventricular aneurysm (LVA) resection and bypass of all significantly diseased coronary arteries, with an operative and late mortality of 3.3 and 8.3%, respectively. Their cardiac catheterizations were reviewed, and the only values that seemed to reflect prognosis were preoperative cardiac index and the presence or absence of septal motion. The lower the cardiac index, the less likely the patient was to do well postoperatively. There were no survivors who had lacked septal motion by left anterior oblique ventriculogram. Patients without septal motion are therefore no longer considered surgical candidates. If septal motion is present, resection of LVA carries no more risk than myocardial revascularization without LVA.
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