Revisão Revisado por pares

Characteristics and outcome of congenital left ventricular aneurysm and diverticulum: Analysis of 809 cases published since 1816

2015; Elsevier BV; Volume: 185; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.ijcard.2015.03.050

ISSN

1874-1754

Autores

Marc‐Alexander Ohlow, Hubertus von Korn, Bernward Lauer,

Tópico(s)

Cardiac Valve Diseases and Treatments

Resumo

Congenital left ventricular aneurysm (LVA) or diverticulum (LVD) is rare cardiac anomalies. We aimed to analyse the clinical characteristics and outcome in all ever published patients.MEDLINE, Web of science, Google and EMBASE, and reference lists of relevant articles were searched for publications reporting on LVA or LVD patients.We identified 809 patients published since 1816 [354 (49.1%) LVA, 453 (50.6%) LVD, 2 (0.3%) both]. Mean age at diagnosis was 34.1±27 (LVA) and 29.7±27.6years (LVD; p=0.05). 48.9% were male. LVA was larger (38.7±22.5mm versus 31.4±21.2mm; p=0.002) and frequently found in submitral location (33% versus 4.9%; p<0.001), LVD was frequently located at the LV-apex (61.2% versus 28.7%; p<0.001). LVD was often associated with cardiac (34.2% versus 11%; p<0.001) or extracardiac anomalies (32.7% versus 3%; p<0.001). LVA patients presented more frequently with ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (18.1% versus 13.1%; p=0.01), the incidences of rupture (4% versus 4.5%; p=0.9), syncope (8.3% versus 5.1%; p=0.1), and embolic events (4.9% versus 3.6%; p=0.4) at presentation were not different between LVA and LVD. Mean follow-up was 56.3±43months. Cardiac death occurred more frequently in the LVA group (11.5% versus 5.0%; p=0.05) at a median age of 0.8 [LVA] and 2.5 [LVD] years. The leading cause of cardiac death was congestive heart failure in the LVA-group (50.0% versus 0.0%; p=0.01), and rupture in the LVD-group (75.0% versus 27.3%; p=0.04).LVA and LVD are distinct congenital anomalies with different clinical and morphological characteristics. The prognosis of LVA is significantly worse during long-term follow-up.

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