Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2964172 Journal of Cardiology Cases 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryA 72-year-old man with an old myocardial infarction was admitted to our hospital for cardiac reexamination. He had suffered from an inferior myocardial infarction when he was 60-year-old. The left ventriculogram had then shown a small contractile diverticulum at the apical portion of the left ventricle. Anterior myocardial infarction had recurred when he was 63-year-old. The left ventriculogram performed after the anterior myocardial infarction revealed that the diverticulum had become dilated and non-contractile. On admission, electrocardiography and chest X-ray showed no remarkable changes from the previous studies. Cardiac computed tomography (CT) demonstrated an apical left ventricular diverticulum with narrow communication to the main chamber and myocardial discontinuity of the wall at the site of the diverticulum. Tc-99m tetrofosmin myocardial images showed a perfusion defect in the apex. We presumed that a muscular left ventricular diverticulum had changed to the fibrous type after the anterior myocardial infarction. Cardiac CT imaging provides accurate evaluation of the left ventricular diverticulum and is useful for the differentiation between a left ventricular diverticulum and an aneurysm.

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