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Alterations of the myocardial skeletal framework in acute myocardial infarction with and without ventricular rupture. A preliminary report
Authors:S M Factor  T F Robinson  R Dominitz  S H Cho
Affiliation:Department of Pathology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, N.Y.
Abstract:Thinning and dilatation (expansion) of the infarct region and complete rupture of the ventricular wall are significant complications of acute transmural myocardial infarction associated with increased morbidity and mortality. The pathogenesis of these related events is unknown. Recent studies of myocardial connective tissue have delineated an extensive array of intercellular and pericellular structures which serve as a skeletal framework and which may modulate contractile activity. We have employed a modified silver impregnation method to visualize the connective tissue components by light microscopy. To explore whether the skeletal framework is altered in acute myocardial infarction with and without ventricular rupture, we studied 9 human hearts at autopsy, and 4 canine infarcts of known duration. The human infarctions included 4 nonruptured cases with infarcts 1-5 days old, and 5 ruptured cases with infarcts 3-10 days old. Sections from normal, lateral, and central infarct or ventricular rupture sites were stained with silver. The normal tissue from each heart served as a control. Silver staining was moderately decreased in the lateral infarct zones, and markedly decreased in the central non-ruptured infarct zones. In the 5 ventricular rupture cases, the rupture site had no silver staining. A similar pattern was observed in the 4 canine infarcts. Thus, we conclude that the skeletal framework is markedly altered in the central zone of acute myocardial infarction. The acute changes of silver stained connective tissue may contribute significantly to the development of infarct expansion or ventricular wall rupture.
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