Abstract

We assessed all patients (n = 120) who underwent left ventricular aneurysmectomy as part of a cardiac surgical procedure at the Groby Road Hospital subregional cardiothoracic centre (1980-1990). Of these, 71% had had only one prior myocardial infarction and 84% had symptoms generally associated with aneurysms (congestive cardiac failure, ventricular arrythmias or systemic embolism). The indication for surgery was a combination of angina and aneurysm-related symptoms in 43%, one or more aneurysm-related symptoms in 35%, and angina alone in 22%. The majority of patients (57%) underwent aneurysmectomy and coronary artery bypass grafting, although 35% underwent aneurysmectomy alone. Most (61%) aneurysms were > 6 cm in size, and 75% were located at the apex of the left ventricle. Forty per cent had a mural thrombus, and there was no relationship between prior warfarin use and occurrence of mural thrombus. Overall perioperative mortality was 17% (20 patients), although mortality halved between the first and second halves of the study period. The main reason for perioperative was pump failure. Seventeen patients died late during follow-up (mean 52.5 months), the main cause being further myocardial infarction. Nevertheless, 65% were still alive at 5 years, and 81% and 66% of survivors were still better than pre-operatively at 5 and 8 years, respectively. Post-operative improvement was equally as good in patients who underwent aneurysmectomy alone, or those operated on for aneurysm-related symptoms, as in the whole group. In logistic regression analysis, the only predictor of adverse long-term outcome was the number of previous myocardial infarctions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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