Mechanical complications after acute myocardial infarction (MI)—ventricular septal rupture (VSR), free-wall rupture (FWR), and papillary muscle rupture (PMR)—have become uncommon in the primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) era, yet remain among the most lethal cardiovascular emergencies, with contemporary mortality largely driven by cardiogenic shock and delays to definitive treatment. Although major society documents agree on urgent imaging, early mechanical circulatory support when shock is present, and multidisciplinary decision-making, important transatlantic differences persist, particularly regarding timing of intervention in ventricular septal rupture. This review synthesises current surgical and transcatheter evidence and proposes a unified, physiology-centred framework integrating shock staging, anatomical feasibility, and response to mechanical support. We also introduce STABLE, a structured bedside checklist designed to support consistent daily triage across all three lesions and to align timing decisions with haemodynamic stabilisation rather than centre-specific habit.
Streian et al. (Sat,) studied this question.