•What is a ventricular aneurysm?
A person with a ventricular aneurysm has an abnormal section of the ventricle that is bulging outward. A ventricular aneurysm may appear several days or weeks after a major heart attack. Most ventricular aneurysms occur in men over the age of 40 who have suffered a large heart attack.
A person with a ventricular aneurysm has an abnormal section of the ventricle that is bulging outward. A ventricular aneurysm may appear several days or weeks after a major heart attack. Most ventricular aneurysms occur in men over the age of 40 who have suffered a large heart attack.
LV aneurysm – left ventriculogram
This still picture from a left ventricular angiogram shows a bulge in the anterolateral region of the left ventricle in systole suggestive of an aneurysm. A true aneurysm is composed of all three layers of the heart, namely endocardium, myocardium and pericardium. It has a wide neck and is very unlikely to rupture. In contrast, a pseudo aneurysm is a ventricular rupture sealed off by the pericardium. It has a narrow neck and has a high risk of secondary rupture. A true aneurysm can cause arrhythmias due to the viable tissue in the oorder zone with varying refractory periods which can cause re-entrant arrhythmias. It can also lead to refractory heart failure due to wasted systole – i.e., a portion of the ventricular blood moves in and out of the aneurysm without being pumped out into the aorta.
The region of the aneurysm is usually the territory of a poorly collateralised total or near total coronary occlusion. In this case it is near total occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery beyond a major diagonal with faint anterograde flow (blue arrows)
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