Left Ventricular Reconstruction

Overview and Facts about Left Ventricular Reconstruction

Left ventricular reconstruction is a surgical procedure used in the treatment of heart failure resulting from a heart attack in the heart’s left ventricle. The left ventricle is the lower left chamber of the heart responsible for pumping blood into the aorta, which is the artery that supplies the body with oxygenated blood.

When a heart attack, or myocardial infarction, occurs, a scar forms in the ventricle. This scar tissue can, over time, cause the wall of the ventricle to weaken, leading to the development of an aneurysm. A left ventricular aneurysm is a bulging area of tissue that causes your heart to work harder to pump blood. The increased stress on your heart eventually leads to the enlargement and impaired pumping of the left ventricle.

Reconstructive surgery on the left ventricle restores the ventricle to its normal, healthy shape by removing the scar tissue and aneurysm. The procedure improves the ventricle’s ability to pump blood effectively, which, in turn, improves the symptoms of heart failure

Left ventricular reconstruction is often performed in coordination with procedures to correct additional heart damage, namely mitral valve leaks and narrowed or blocked coronary arteries.