Methods: Between January 2004 and July 2008, 19 patients (9 males, 10 females; mean age 71.7±8.2 years; range 56 to 91 years) were referred to our clinic for surgical treatment of the mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction. Eight (42.1%) patients had free wall rupture (FWR). One of them developed FWR after completion of anesthesia before being scrubbed on the operating table for a scheduled coronary artery bypass grafting surgery. Five (26.3%) had papillary muscle rupture, five (26.3%) had ventricular septal rupture (VSR), and one (5.3%) had double structure rupture (VSR + FWR).
Results: Seven of the eight FWR patients had their echocardiographic information archived. At the onset of these mechanical complications, six (85.7%) patients presented with pericardial tamponade on echocardiography, and one (14.3%) with moderate pericardial effusion. Posterior mitral leaflet flail was noted in all four patients with a posteromedial papillary muscle rupture on echocardiography. The flow across the flail mitral valve was mosaic but not eccentric in two patients, and neither mosaic nor eccentric in two patients. Large erratic movement of the ruptured papillary muscle and the swirling papillary muscle head could be observed in the left atrium in the patient with a complete ruptured papillary muscle. Anterior mitral leaflet flail with eccentric mosaic flow was noted on echocardiography in the only patient with an anterolateral papillary muscle rupture. Four (80%) of the five ventricular septal ruptures were located in the anterior wall, and one (20%) was anteriolateral. The defect and the shunt flow were observed in all five (100%) patients on echocardiography. Two of them (40%) had moderate pericardial effusion.
Conclusion: Echocardiography is a reliable diagnostic tool for diagnosing the mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction in terms of the location and dimension, and is essential for the decision-making on the treatment strategy and postoperative follow-up.
Table 2: Mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction and their prognoses
Five patients developed papillary muscle rupture after myocardial infarction. The rupture was partial in four (one of them had sub-total rupture) (80%), and was complete in one (20%) patient. The posteromedial papillary muscle was involved in four (80%), and the anterolateral in one (20%) patient, respectively. Posterior mitral leaflet flail was noted on echocardiography in all four patients with one posteromedial papillary muscle rupture (Fig. 3). The flow across the flail mitral valve was mosaic but not eccentric in two patients, and neither mosaic nor eccentric in two patients. Large erratic movement of the ruptured papillary muscle and the swirling papillary muscle head could be observed in the left atrium in the patient with a complete ruptured papillary muscle (Fig. 4). Anterior mitral leaflet flail with eccentric mosaic flow was noted on echocardiography in the only patient with an anterolateral papillary muscle rupture (Fig. 5). All five patients had a mitral valve replacement, as the ruptured papillary muscle was not amenable to repair. Three of them had simultaneous CABG to the culprit coronary arteries. All five patients survived the operation (Table 2).
Five patients had ventricular septal rupture. Four (80%) were located in the anterior wall, and one (20%) was anterolateral. The defect and the shunt flow were observed in all five (100%) patients echocardiographically (Fig. 6). Two of them (40%) had moderate pericardial effusion. The diagnoses were identified by operation, illustrating the defect ranging from 0.6 to 1.9 cm in diameter. Patch repair was conducted in all five patients. One patient had successful percutaneous coronary intervention prior to surgical repair, and simultaneous CABG was performed in two patients. Two patients survived the operation, one of them was doing well and one developed residual shunt measuring 0.8 cm, in whom the intact patch and residual shunt were visualized by echocardiography postoperatively in two survivors of VSR patients. The remaining three patients died early postoperatively (Table 2).
The only patient with double structural rupture (apical VSR + lateral FWR) who underwent a VSR patch repair and a FWR patch glue repair died of cardiogenic shock on the first postoperative day.
Seven survivors had postoperative echocardiography follow-up at 12.8±16.7 (range 1-48) months. Their left ventricular ejection fraction was 44.7±22.3% (range 20-83%), left ventricular diastolic dimension 4.80±0.73 cm (range 4.2-6.39 cm), systolic dimension 3.40±1.17 cm (range 2.45-5.83 cm), and left ventricular posterior wall dimension 1.01 ± 0.12 cm (range 0.9-1.18 cm), respectively.
Free wall rupture may involve the anteroseptal, anteroseptal, inferolateral, and inferior left ventricular walls, respectively.[5] I emura et al.[6] reported 13/17 (76.5%) patients with FWR were diagnosed by echocardiography, and the diagnoses were established by pericardial puncture, catheterization and operation in the remaining patients. The main echocardiographic findings in patients with FWR are pericardial effusion[7] tamponade[8] or periepicardial hematoma.[9] Cardiac compression and tears of the ventricular wall may be visualized by echocardiography except for hypokinesis.[10,11]
Cardiogenic shock and pulmonary edema in patients with first-onset acute myocardial infarction is usually suggestive of papillary muscle rupture. In such cases, mitral leaflet flail with massive mitral regurgitant flow or swinging papillary muscle with large-amplitude erratic motion could be noted.[12,13] The papillary muscle head and mitral chordae may get tangled shortly after development of the rupture. However, in 35% of the patients, a sign of left atrial prolapsing papillary muscle was absent.[14]
In patients with VSR, visualization of the septal defect may be sometimes difficult, and a severe hypokinesis in the middle and distal portion septum may be visible instead.[15] Color Doppler echocardiography may initially show a small ventricular septal defect as shunt flow in turbulent nature across the ventricular septum. The size of the rupture may increase with time.[16]
Combined FWR and VSR is the most common type of double structural rupture with an incidence of about 0.3% of patients with an acute myocardial infarction.[4] Mann and Roberts[17] classified double structural rupture as two types: true and junctional. In the true type, the tears were present separately in the ventricular septum and free wall; while in the junctional, tears of both structures incorporated together. Rentoukas et al.[18] reported a case of double structural rupture diagnosed by echocardiography where VSR and apical FWR with pseudoaneurysm formation were demonstrated. Our patient with double structural rupture was typically a true type according Mann’s classification.
In this report, we note that 85.7% of patients with FWR presented with tamponade, and 14.3% had pericardial effusion on echocardiography. Occasionally, flow disturbances in the left ventricular cavity caused by FWR could be visible. All the patients with papillary muscle rupture showed flail mitral leaflet with absence of eccentric jet flow behind the mitral valve in four of them. The defect and shunt flow across the ventricular septum could be visible in all patients with VSR. In a word, direct signs of rupture can only be seen occasionally, as the myocardial tear is often irregular and tortuous, and may be covered by thrombi or blood clot.[7] The indirect echocardiographic signs, including tamponade, pericardial effusion, intrapericardial echoes, or ventricular wall compression, may be helpful for the diagnosis of the mechanical complications in patients with acute myocardial infarction.[7] Although magnetic resonance imaging, catheterization and computed tomographic scan may also contribute to the diagnosis of an impending myocardial rupture, they are more likely to be applicable when the patients with a rupture are hemodynamically stable.[19] However, such patients are usually circulatory-collapsed presenting with cardiogenic shock or pulmonary edema, and thus echocardiography could not be overlooked in such occasions.
In conclusion, mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction are infrequent but lethal. Early surgery may rescue some critically ill patients. Echocardiography is a reliable diagnostic tool for diagnosing these mechanical complications in terms of the location and dimension, and is essential for decisionmaking on the treatment strategy and postoperative follow-up.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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