AI Article Synopsis

  • Anterior myocardial infarction leads to immediate left ventricular dysfunction and ongoing heart failure due to neurohumoral activation and changes in heart structure.
  • Continued neurohumoral activation results in further remodeling of the heart, creating an imbalance that worsens heart failure over time.
  • Combining medical treatment with surgical intervention can significantly improve heart function and survival rates in patients with this condition.

Article Abstract

Anterior myocardial infarction produces abrupt left ventricular (LV) dysynergy and global systolic dysfunction. Rapid intense neurohumoral activation, infarct expansion, and early ventricular chamber dilatation all contribute to restoring a normal stroke volume despite a persistently depressed ejection fraction. Continued neurohumoral activation provokes late remodeling of the remote non-infarcted myocardium, characterized by an abnormal progressively increasing LV volume/mass ratio that leads to further LV remodeling. Heart failure is a progressive disorder of LV remodeling. Heart failure from post-infarction remodeling is unique because of the persistent non-functioning scar that self- perpetuates abnormal loading conditions and neurohumoral activation. Medical therapy attenuates remodeling and improves survival but does not change the size of the scar. Surgical ventricular restoration to exclude the non-functioning infarct from the ventricular cavity decreases ventricular volumes, increases global ejection fraction, attenuates neurohumoral activation and yields an excellent 5-year survival. Combined medical and surgical therapy is recommended in this patient population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10741-005-6802-7DOI Listing

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