1F.R., a 58 year old Hispanic male, DOB 1/10/1937, sustained an acute inferior-posterior myocardial infarction on 9/25/1996. Coronary angiography demonstrated a totally occluded circumflex coronary artery filling
via collaterals, with patent left anterior descending and right coronary vessels. Echocardiography showed inferior-posterior akinesis, inferior wall aneurysm, and an ejection fraction about 40%.
![Fig. (1) Fig. (1)](picrender.fcgi?artid=2570576&blobname=TOCMJ-2-1_F1.gif) | Fig. (1) Transthoracic echocardiogram done 10 years after patch repair of the subacute ventricular rupture (arrow). |
Because of recurrent ventricular tachycardia with syncope, he received a permanent defibrillator implant about two weeks after the acute MI. One week later he was readmitted with syncope and physical signs of cardiac tamponade. Emergent cardiac catheterization and ventriculography indicated ventricular rupture with extravasation into the pericardium. At surgery this diagnosis was confirmed and the ventricular defect was closed with a Teflon patch. No coronary bypass grafting was done. Postoperative echocardiography revealed the patch and a small residual pericardial effusion. Ten years after surgical repair, the patient is asymptomatic on a secondary prevention regimen of an aspirin, ace inhibitor, a statin, and a beta-blocker. His favorable course illustrates that myocardial rupture after acute MI, although most often rapidly fatal, can occasionally be diagnosed in time for a surgical repair to be performed. In this case, the patient has survived and has been well for ten years, despite the additional co-morbidity of recurrent ventricular tachycardia requiring an implantable defibrillator. We believe that the long term favorable course in our case is attributable to preserved ventricular function. As in the case of infarction complicated by ventricular septal or papillary muscle rupture, survival after repair of the mechanical complication depends on adequate ventricular function. In our patient, with a current ejection fraction of 50 %, he has not only survived for ten years- but is asymptomatic and fully active.
![Fig. (2) Fig. (2)](picrender.fcgi?artid=2570576&blobname=TOCMJ-2-1_F2.gif) | Fig. (2) Transthoracic echocardiogram done 10 years after patch repair of the subacute ventricular rupture (arrow). |
![Fig. (3) Fig. (3)](picrender.fcgi?artid=2570576&blobname=TOCMJ-2-1_F3.gif) | Fig. (3) Transthoracic echocardiogram done 10 years after patch repair of the subacute ventricular rupture (arrow). |