RESUMO
Fifty-two patients with primary transmural infero-posterior infarcts underwent right heart catheterisation on admission to hospital and coronary angiography between the 7th day and 4th month after onset of symptoms. The patients were divided into two groups A (N = 34) with signs of right ventricular dysfunction on admission indicating biventricular infarction, and B (N = 18) without right ventricular dysfunction classified as isolated LV infarction. No significant differences were observed between the two groups with respect to: global and regional LV function; the incidence of single, double and triple vessel disease; the incidence and location of right coronary artery thrombosis; the incidence and location of lesions of the left coronary tree (LCA, LAD, Cx); the extent of coronary disease (Gensini score); the dominant artery (right coronary/circumflex), the frequency and quality of revascularisation of distal vessels. The only significant differences were the higher incidence of severe lesions (90 p. 100) of the right coronary and circumflex arteries and of stenosis of the first large septal branch of the LAD artery in Group A (p less than 0.05). These results show that the indications for coronary angiography in biventricular inferior infarction are no greater than those in mono LV inferior infarction. This supports experimental data on the physiopathology of RV infarction which demonstrates that except in cases of proximal thrombosis of the right coronary artery, the possibilities of revascularisation from the left coronary tree are limited.