Background: Several studies have demonstrated the benefit of the patency of infarct-related artery (IRA) in acute myocardial infarction (AMI). However those studies have not been concerned with myocardial viability in the region-at-risk. In the present study the effect of the patency of IRA was investigated in the setting of anterior AMI with poor viable myocardium in the risk region.
Methods and results: From 1993 to 1996 patients with a first time anterior AMI and poor viable myocardium in the region-at-risk at 1 month after onset were identified and enrolled. Patients with a totally occluded IRA were included in the Non-Open group (n=44), and patients with a reperfused IRA were included in the Open group (n=49). At 5 years after onset, left ventricular function was better preserved in the Open group than in the Non-Open group (p<0.05). Kaplan-Meier survival curves for cardiac mortality and event-free survival curves revealed poor prognoses in the Non-Open group over a 5-year period (p<0.05, respectively). The advantages of a patent IRA were further seen in health-related quality-of-life outcomes (p<0.05).
Conclusions: Even in patients with poor myocardial viability after an anterior AMI, the patency of the IRA is strongly associated with improved long-term survival, independent of residual myocardium viability.