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Right ventricular infarction complicating left ventricular infarction secondary to coronary heart disease: Frequency, location, associated findings and significance from analysis of 236 necropsy patients with acute or healed myocardial infarction
Authors:Jeffrey M. Isner MD   FACC  William C. Roberts MD   FACC  
Affiliation:

From the Pathology Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA

Abstract:Right ventricular infarction associated with left ventricular infarction was identified by gross examination at necropsy in 33 (14 percent) of 236 patients with transmural myocardial infarction. Right ventricular infarction occurred exclusively as a complication of posterior left ventricular infarction. Associated right ventricular infarction occurred in none of the 97 patients with isolated anterior wall infarction of the left ventricle, but in 33 (24 percent) of the 139 patients with posterior left ventricular infarction. Transmural infarction of the posterior ventricular septum was an additional prerequisite for right ventricular infarction. Of the 139 patients with infarction of the posterior left ventricular wall, 74 had no transmural infarction of the ventricular septum and none of these 74 had associated right ventricular infarction. In contrast, of the 65 patients with infarction of the posterior left ventricular wall and transmural infarction of the ventricular septum, 33 (50 percent) had associated right ventricular infarction.

Among the 33 patients with right ventricular infarction, the infarct was limited to the posterior right ventricular free wall in 27 (82 percent); in the other 6 patients (18 percent) it extended to involve the anterolateral right ventricular free wall. Among patients with a posterior left ventricular infarct, those with a right ventricular infarct had right ventricular dilatation nearly three times (P < 0.05) more frequently than the patients without a right ventricular infarct. Comparison of the same two groups disclosed no differences in the patients' age, sex, extent of coronary arterial luminal narrowing, right ventricular hypertrophy, right ventricular thrombi or duration of symptoms of myocardial ischemia.

Hemodynamic data in four patients with a right ventricular infarct disclosed previously reported characteristic hemodynamics of right ventricular infarction in only one patient. Recognition of right ventricular infarction is important because it implies specific therapy, namely, aggressive volume administration. Clinical evidence of posterior left ventricular infarction and right ventricular dilatation should arouse strong suspicion of associated right ventricular infarction.

Keywords:Address for reprints: William C. Roberts   MD   Building 10A   Room 3E-30   National Institutes of Health   Bethesda   Maryland 20014.
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