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Title: Differences in left ventricular function between anterior and inferior myocardial infarction of equivalent enzymatic size. Author: Hands ME, Antico V, Thompson PL, Hung J, Robinson JS, Lloyd BL. Journal: Int J Cardiol; 1987 Nov; 17(2):155-67. PubMed ID: 3679599. Abstract: The reasons for the poorer prognosis of anterior versus inferior myocardial infarction of equivalent enzymatic size remain uncertain. We investigated whether there are differences in left ventricular function between patients with anterior and inferior infarctions of equivalent enzymatic size to account for their differing outcomes. Clinical, serum enzyme, and electrocardiographic data were prospectively recorded in a consecutive series of patients less than 70 years of age with their first myocardial infarction. At 29 +/- 6 days following infarction, ejection fraction and left ventricular wall motion were assessed by gated heart scintigraphy and functional capacity by treadmill exercise testing in 19 patients with anterior and in 23 patients with inferior myocardial infarction. Peak creatine kinase and QRS scores were used to estimate total infarct size and left ventricular infarct size respectively. The anterior infarcts were of similar size to the inferior infarcts as determined by peak creatine kinase (1444 [mean] +/- 1161 [SD] U/L versus 1484 [mean] +/- 1182 [SD] U/L, respectively, P = 0.91) and peak aspartate transaminases (174 +/- 112 U/L versus 164 +/- 102 U/L, P = 0.78). The anterior myocardial infarct group had a greater percentage of the left ventricle infarcted on QRS scoring than the inferior infarct group (25.9 +/- 14.4% versus 11.1 +/- 6.0% respectively, P = 0.0004), lower global left ventricular ejection fraction (45.8 +/- 16% versus 54.6 +/- 9.2%, P = 0.04) and greater left ventricular regional wall abnormality. A significant negative correlation existed between left ventricular ejection fraction and peak creatine kinase for both groups, but was more marked with anterior infarction (r = -0.78, P less than 0.01) compared with inferior infarction (r = -0.49, P less than 0.05). Exercise-induced ST segment elevation was more frequent in the anterior than the inferior infarct group (59% versus 18%, P less than 0.02). However, both infarct locations had similar exercise tolerance, exercise-induced angina and ST segment depression. Despite equivalence of infarct size of the two infarct locations on enzyme testing, anterior infarction was associated with greater abnormality of left ventricular function with lower resting global left ventricular ejection fraction; greater resting left ventricular regional wall abnormality and greater exercise-induced ST segment elevation. These differences probably contribute to the poorer prognosis of patients with anterior infarction compared to those with inferior infarction of equivalent enzymatic size, given the previously well-documented prognostic importance of left ventricular function.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]