Journal of electrocardiology
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Case Reports
Diagnosis of myocardial infarction-induced ventricular aneurysm in the presence of complete left bundle branch block.
An analysis of the 4,196 files of our Cardiology Clinic cohort showed 128 patients with a complete left bundle branch block (LBBB) in their electrocardiograms (ECGs). Of these patients, 27 had suffered a myocardial infarction in the past and had been found to have a ventricular aneurysm (VA), documented by > or = 1 of several noninvasive and invasive diagnostic methods. Five of these 27 patients had stable ST-segment elevation in > or = 1 of left precordial ECG leads, with predominantly positive QRS complexes (an ECG criterion for the diagnosis of VA in the presence of LBBB, which we have recently described). ⋯ The frequency of distribution of VA in the septal, and even more, apical myocardial regions was higher in the patients with a positive ECG diagnosis of VA, than in the patients with a negative one (P = .049, and P = .009, correspondingly). The number of myocardial territories involved with a VA was not different in the 2 subgroups (P =.325). Pathophysiologically, this ECG alteration diagnostic of VA represents a superimposition of the primary ST-segment elevation due to the VA, on the expected secondary ST-segment depression due to the LBBB, and represents a summation effect.