Abstract
Whether angioplasty of occluded vessels after myocardial infarction may have beneficial effects on left ventricular function remains unknown. Patients with a first myocardial infarction and thrombolytic therapy who had an occluded infarct-related vessel at delayed coronary angiography were referred systematically for an elective coronary angioplasty performed between 3 and 4 weeks after the myocardial infarction. All patients underwent stress-redistribution-reinjection thallium-201 single-photon emission computed tomography for myocardial viability assessment. Prior angioplasty, a quantitative evaluation of global and regional left ventricular function, was performed. The study group consisted of 38 patients (aged 57 ± 10 years); 18 had anterior wall infarctions and 20 inferior wall infarctions, but before angioplasty 3 had a patent artery and were excluded. Angioplasty was successful in 30 patients. At follow-up 13 patients (43%) had an occluded coronary artery. In contrast with patients with an occluded coronary artery at follow-up, those with a patent coronary artery had no left ventricular enlargement and had an improvement in both left ventricular ejection fraction (from 48 ± 9% to 52 ± 9.8%, p = 0.002) and regional wall motion index (Δ = +0.95 SD, p < 0.01). In patients with a patent vessel at follow-up, there was a positive correlation between the number of myocardial viable segments and improvement of the infarct zone wall motion (r = 0.52; p = 0.035), and the number of necrotic segments at baseline was positively correlated to the 4-month changes in end-diastolic volume indexes (r = 0.6; p = 0.04). Thus, elective revascularization of occluded coronary arteries with viable myocardium after myocardial infarction improves left ventricular function and lessens remodeling if the artery remains patent during follow-up.
Published Version
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