Abstract

Seventeen patients with predominant right ventricular infarction (RVMI) were studied with two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE). On initial 2DE all had abnormal wall motion (AWM), defined as akinesis plus dyskinesis, in the inferior right ventricle (RV), inferior interventricular septum, and inferior left ventricle (LV). The extent of RV vs LV AWM in short-axis sections at mitral, chordal, and papillary levels was 58%·vs 29%, 56% vs 38%, and 59% vs 38%, respectively. The calculated topographic extent of AWM was greater in the RV than in the LV (58% vs 36%, p < 0.05), and the RV LV ratio (1.65) exceeded ( p < 0.001) unity. Peak creatine phosphokinase levels correlated significantly ( p < 0.001) with the topographic extent of LV AWM ( r = 0.79) or RV + LV AWM ( r = 0.75). Although all patients had RV dilatation, eight also had LV dilatation. Serial studies detected the cause of mechanical complications (n = 13), mural echo densities suggesting thrombi (LV in six and RV in seven), and persistent AWM in survivors. Thus, 2DE provided diagnostic data, and assessment of RV and LV AWM confirmed predominant RV involvement.

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