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  • Title: [Usefulness and safety of intravenous thrombolytic therapy for elderly patients with acute myocardial infarction: relationship with cardiac rupture].
    Author: Sakai M, Imai T, Kuboki K, Maeda S, Ueda S, Kuwajima I, Ohkawa S, Matsushita S.
    Journal: J Cardiol; 1999 Mar; 33(3):153-61. PubMed ID: 10225195.
    Abstract:
    The usefulness and safety of intravenous thrombolytic therapy were investigated in 298 patients older than 65 years (145 males, 153 females, mean age 78 years) with acute myocardial infarction from 1984 to 1993. These patients were divided into 2 groups of 88 patients younger than 74 years (Group A) and 210 patients older than 75 years (Group B). Seventy patients received thrombolytic therapy with urokinase (UK) or tissue-plasminogen activator [t-PA (UK96 X 10(4)U: 57 patients, t-PA 30-40 X 10(4)U/kg: 12, UK + t-PA: 1)] within 6 hours after the onset of acute myocardial infarction (Group TL). Two hundred twenty-eight patients received conventional therapy (Group C). There were no differences in the frequencies of the site of myocardial infarction, Killip class, admission within 6 hours after the onset of acute myocardial infarction or thrombolytic therapy between the 2 age groups. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in Group B than in Group A (43% vs 24%, p < 0.01). In Groups A and B, in-hospital mortality was 20% lower in Group TL compared with Group C (20% vs 25% in Group A, 36% vs 45% in Group B). In Group B, the mortality from pump failure including shock and congestive heart failure was half in Group TL compared with Group C (13% vs 30%). Cardiac rupture was found in 11 patients of Group TL and 7 patients of Group C. Therefore, the mortality from cardiac rupture was fivefold higher in Group TL compared with Group C (8% vs. 1.6% in Group A, 20% vs 3.6% in Group B). Of 11 patients with cardiac rupture in Group TL, 8 patients suffered rupture in the early phase within 12 hours after the onset of acute myocardial infarction and the tear was present near the center of infarcted area in all 7 autopsy cases. The case of recanalization of the infarct-related coronary artery in Group TL revealed moderate to massive hemorrhagic infarction at autopsy. This indicates that the mechanisms involved in cardiac rupture are different in thrombolytic therapy and conventional therapy. Intravenous thrombolytic therapy is effective for the reduction of mortality from pump failure in elderly patients with acute myocardial infarction older than 75 years. However, it must be evaluated as one of the risk factors of cardiac rupture in elderly patients.
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