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Left ventricular apical aneurysm associated with normal coronary arteries following cardiac surgery: echocardiographic features and differential diagnosis.

Left ventricular aneurysms mainly occur in patients with transmural myocardial infarction caused by left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion. Left ventricular apical aneurysm is rarely found in patients with normal coronary arteriograms, and even rarer in these patients following cardiac operations. We analyzed 37 patients with postoperative left ventricular apical aneurysm, including 1 case from our hospital and 36 cases from the literature; 23 cases (62%) had left ventricular apical true aneurysms and 14 cases (38%) had left ventricular apical pseudoaneurysms, all confirmed at surgery and/or angiography. All cases, with the exception of one, had previously undergone cardiac surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass with apical venting. Although left ventriculography is generally regarded as the gold standard for diagnosis of ventricular aneurysm, echocardiography is an accurate and sensitive method in the evaluation of left ventricular apical aneurysm. Differential diagnosis of left ventricular apical aneurysm includes takotsubo cardiomyopathy, post transapical approach for transcatheter aortic valve implantation, and left ventricular diverticulum.

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