Literature DB >> 3594300

To anticoagulate or not: implications for the management of patients with acute myocardial infarction complicated by both left ventricular thrombus and pericardial effusion.

B K Khandheria, C Shub, R A Nishimura, F A Miller, J B Seward, A J Tajik.   

Abstract

We reviewed the clinical and echocardiographic characteristics of seven patients with left ventricular thrombus and pericardial effusion. Each patient had a recent anterior wall myocardial infarction with an apical left ventricular thrombus. Two patients had clinical evidence of pericarditis. On two-dimensional echocardiography, the effusion was judged to be small in five cases and moderate in two. All patients received parenteral heparin therapy; six of the seven patients subsequently received long-term oral anticoagulation therapy. None of the patients had any clinical or two-dimensional echocardiographic evidence of increasing pericardial effusion or tamponade. Documented systemic embolization was seen in only one patient, whose anticoagulant therapy was stopped 2 weeks after myocardial infarction. In five patients, repeat two-dimensional echocardiography was performed from 2 to 4 months after infarction; in four patients, neither pericardial effusion nor left ventricular thrombus was found. In this group of patients, both short- and long-term anticoagulants were safely administered despite pericardial effusion.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3594300

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Cardiol        ISSN: 0828-282X            Impact factor:   5.223


  1 in total

1.  Echocardiography in the assessment of complications of myocardial infarction.

Authors:  S Wilansky
Journal:  Tex Heart Inst J       Date:  1991
  1 in total

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