PMID: 3753117Sep 1, 1986Paper

Lack of significant long-term sequelae following traumatic myocardial contusion

Archives of Internal Medicine
M SturaitisW J Sibbald

Abstract

We assessed the possibility of long-term functional cardiac sequelae in patients who had sustained a traumatic myocardial contusion (group 1) by comparing this group with a cohort group of patients with similar traumatic injuries but exclusive of the cardiac component (group 2). More than one year following injury, patients in group 1 were qualitatively indistinguishable from patients in group 2 according to the New York Heart Association classification. Both the left and the right ventricular ejection fractions, less in group 1 than in group 2 immediately following trauma, were similar between groups during follow-up study at rest. During exercise to maximal work load at follow-up, changes in the mean right and left ventricular ejection fractions were also similar between the two patient groups. We therefore concluded that traumatic myocardial contusion to the left and/or right ventricle almost always resolves without significant functional sequelae within one year of injury.

Citations

Oct 9, 2012·Annals of Cardiac Anaesthesia·Ayman El-MenyarRifat Latifi
Jan 1, 1997·Injury·M H van WijngaardenV Simonetti
Mar 26, 2013·Clinics in Sports Medicine·Melissa Mascaro, Thomas H Trojian
Oct 30, 2012·Cardiology Clinics·Jeremy S Bock, R Michael Benitez
Dec 1, 1995·Chest·N T Feghali, L M Prisant
Apr 21, 2004·Current Problems in Surgery·Riyad Karmy-Jones, Gregory J Jurkovich
Sep 1, 1988·Annals of Emergency Medicine·G A LindenbaumR A Kapusnick
Jul 1, 1997·The Annals of Thoracic Surgery·A P BanningR Pillai
Aug 30, 2000·The Journal of Trauma·D Y Ellis, N P Hutchinson
Aug 1, 2008·European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery : Official Publication of the European Trauma Society·George C Velmahos, Muhammad U Butt

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