Abstract

Abstract Aims Left ventricular (LV) aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms are two complications of myocardial infarction, either symptomatic or silent, leading to death or serious morbidity in several cases and often precluding non-cardiac surgery. Here the differential diagnosis is challenging and multimodality imaging is often needed to assess the risk of heart rupture. Methods and results A 71 years-old woman was referred to our Cardiology Department for a preoperative evaluation before lung lobectomy. Her past medical history included multiple cardiovascular risk factors and abdominal aorta aneurysm. She also had severe peripheral arterial disease treated with femoral popliteal bypass surgery in June 2021. In August 2021 she suffered from vascular graft thrombosis requiring a redo surgery. During hospitalization, she was found to have a lung adenocarcinoma. The patient had an unremarkable cardiological history and was asymptomatic. EKG was unremarkable. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed a mildly impaired LV systolic function (EF = 40%), an inferolateral basal wall akinesia and a huge aneurysm with intracavitary thrombus and a wide neck arising right below the posterior mitral annulus. The annular distortion caused by the expanding aneurysm contributed to the development of mitral regurgitation (MR) by displacing the annulus and subvalvular apparatus, resulting in restriction of the posterior mitral valve leaflet, coaptation failure, and moderate MR. Coronary angiography demonstrated a severe 3-vessel coronary artery disease. To further characterize the aneurysm, a cardiac magnetic resonance was carried out. T1 weighted inversion recovery LGE 2-chamber and short axis views showed transmural LGE of the inferior wall and confirmed the presence of a saccular dilatation with thin wall, wide neck (5 × 6 cm) and large intracavitary thrombus at high risk of rupture. Since the presence of metastatic lesions was excluded, the patient underwent cardiac surgery followed by elective lobectomy. Intraoperative findings were consistent with LV aneurysm with a thin myocardial wall. Aneurysm and related thrombus were removed and the orifice was closed with a Dacron patch. In the same setting a myocardial revascularization with two coronary artery bypass grafts was also performed. Surgery was successfully performed without any complication. Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography clearly revealed the aneurysm and witnessed the reduction of MR after the restoration of LV inferolateral wall geometry. Conclusions Our case highlights the importance of thorough evaluation prior to non-cardiac surgery using multimodality imaging, especially when incidental echocardiographic findings in asymptomatic patients occur. A careful pre-operative assessment of patients planned for non-cardiac surgery is the key to favourable postoperative outcome.

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