1 From the Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Section of Cardiology, and the Department of Anesthesiology, University of Miami School of Medicine, Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Florida 33136.
A review was made of the entire hospital course of 20 patients aged 44 to 79 years who suddenly developed clinically intractable left-heart pump failure as a result of acute myocardial infarction. They were divided into three groups according to their presenting circulatory state. Thirteen patients were in cardiac arrest (group I), four had cardiogenic shock due to myocardial rupture (group II), and three had severe intractable left-heart failure (group III). Preoperative partial or complete cardiac catheterization was possible in six patients. Surgical treatment using cardiopulmonary bypass was selectively undertaken as a mode of therapy in 11 of the 20 cases. In 10, the area of infarction was delineated and was resected. Pathologically, the infarcts were from 1 to 14 days old, and in 19 of 20 cases involved the anterior wall. The specimens weighed 25 to 83 g. One patient, who was discharged, had infarctectomy and double coronary vein bypass graft. One patient lived for 3 weeks after infarctectomy and pulmonary embolectomy. Two others survived after surgery for 2 and 36 hours, respectively. The results of this prospective study suggest that identification of patients possibly amenable to successful treatment of medically irreversible pump failure by surgical means will require earlier recognition of the high-risk group and intensive hemodynamic and radiographic evaluation of the extent of the disease process.
Submitted on October 29, 1970
© 1971 American Heart Association, Inc.
Clinical, Surgical, and Pathologic Correlation in Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction and Pump Failure
Key Words: Cardiac arrest Cardiogenic shock Ventricular function Cardiac rupture Vena cava umbrella Cardiopulmonary bypass Pulmonary emboli Infarctectomy Cardiac catheterization
Accepted on August 4, 1971
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