A left ventricular aneurysm can form after a transmural myocardial infarction and involves dilation of the left ventricular wall in an abnormal fashion. Most commonly, the apex of the heart is ...
The shape of the aneurysm is variable. The most common type is merely a simple outpouching of the heart-muscle wall not sharply delineated from the remainder of the ventricle; occasionally ...
One of the key studies aimed to characterize the prenatal features and outcomes of congenital ventricular aneurysms and diverticula using a new technique called fetal heart quantification (HQ ...
Q: My brother was diagnosed with an aortic aneurysm. Do I need to be tested to see if I have one? A: The aorta is the ...
At that time a heart murmur was first noted ... Demonstrating an Ascending Aortic Aneurysm, with Hyper-trophy of the Left Ventricle and Some Enlargement of the Left Atrium. On the 10th hospital ...
Benign ventricular tachycardia (VT ... ECG or x-ray evidence of underlying heart disease. Eight of these (28%) had VT localized to the LV and are the basis of this report. Age at presentation ...
A left ventricular aneurysm can be diagnosed on ECG when there is persistent ST segment elevation occurring 6 weeks after a known transmural myocardial infarction (usually an anterior MI).