Left-ventricular thrombosis developed in 34.3% of patients with anterior-wall myocardial infarction (46% in those with apical akinesis/dyskinesis) compared to 0% with inferior-wall infarction.
Cohort (n=70)
Absolute Event Rate: 34.3% vs 0%
To study the incidence of left-ventricular thrombosis after transmural myocardial infarction, we performed serial two-dimensional echocardiography in 70 consecutive patients. Thirty-five patients had inferior-wall infarction: none had a left-ventricular thrombus. The other 35 had anterior-wall infarction: 12 had left-ventricular thrombi. Thrombi were diagnosed an average of five days after the infarction (range, one to 11 days). All patients with left-ventricular thrombi had severe apical-wall-motion abnormalities (akinesis or dyskinesis). Twenty-six of the 35 patients with anterior infarctions had apical akinesis or dyskinesis on echocardiography; left-ventricular thrombi developed in 12 of these 26 (46 per cent). We conclude that patients with severe apical-wall-motion abnormalities during acute transmural anterior myocardial infarction are at high risk for left-ventricular thrombosis. This high-risk group can be identified before the development of left-ventricular thrombi. Patients with inferior infarction or anterior infarction without a severe apical-wall-motion abnormality are at low risk.
Asinger et al. (Thu,) conducted a cohort in Acute transmural myocardial infarction (n=70). Anterior-wall myocardial infarction vs. Inferior-wall myocardial infarction was evaluated on Incidence of left-ventricular thrombosis. Left-ventricular thrombosis developed in 34.3% of patients with anterior-wall myocardial infarction (46% in those with apical akinesis/dyskinesis) compared to 0% with inferior-wall infarction.