Objectives: The aim of this study was to identify factors causing rupture recurrence after surgical repair of postinfarction ventricular septal rupture and to evaluate the indication for reoperation.
Patients: Recurrence of rupture was analysed in 25 out of a series of 109 patients who underwent surgical repair for postinfarction ventricular septal rupture between 1980 and 1992 in our institution.
Results: The mean interval between initial operation and recurrence was 3.6 days with a median of 2 days. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified early thrombolysis after infarction (P = 0.0085) as a risk factor for recurrence of the rupture. Rupture recurrence occurred more in the anterior then in the posterior infarction site, although non-significant. Reoperation was indicated in 15 patients, in 13 for postrecurrent cardiac failure. The main determinant of cardiac failure was a large postrecurrent shunt (P = 0.05). The mean interval between initial operation and reoperation was 136 days with a median of 101 days. In 6 patients a combined apical ventricular septal rupture recurrence and anterior ventricular aneurysm was found, in 9 patients the recurrent rupture was proximally located, without concomitant aneurysm formation. Of 15 patients who were reoperated, one died in hospital and three after the in-hospital period. Of 10 patients treated conservatively, one died in hospital and two after the in-hospital period. One residual ventricular septal rupture closed spontaneously.
Conclusions: Rupture recurrence is mainly determined by early thrombolysis. Postrecurrent cardiac failure, as the main indication for reoperation, is dependent on postrecurrent shunt size.