Left ventricular pseudoaneurysm: Difference between revisions

Line 9: Line 9:


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*Can be asymptomatic
*10% are asymptomatic <ref>Frances, C., Romero, A., Grady, D. (1998). Left ventricular pseudoaneurysm. Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 32(3); 557 - 61</ref>
*History of [[MI]]
*History of [[MI]] or cardiac surgery
*Angina, [[shortness of breath]]/DOE
*Symptoms similar to congestive heart failure
**[[Angina]]
**[[Shortness of breath]]


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

Revision as of 16:53, 17 March 2019

Background

  • Acute MI or surgical mishap causes ventricular free wall rupture [1]
    • Contained by pericardial adhesions
    • Morality rate high secondary to rupture of pseudoaneurysm

Causes

  • Transmural MI (anterior or inferior most common)
  • Surgical mishap

Clinical Features

Differential Diagnosis

ST Elevation

Evaluation

  • LV angiography (TTE unreliable)

Management

  • Surgical repair = 10% 5 yr mortality
  • Medical therapy = 50% 5 yr mortality

Disposition

Complications

  • Angina (increased O2 demand)
  • Complete LV rupture

See Also

  1. Frances, C., Romero, A., and Grady, D. (1998). Left ventricular pseudoaneurysm. Journal of the American College of Cardiology; 32(3): 557 - 61
  2. Frances, C., Romero, A., Grady, D. (1998). Left ventricular pseudoaneurysm. Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 32(3); 557 - 61