RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Surgery of post-myocardial infarction scars. Early and late results in 70 patients. JF British Heart Journal JO Heart FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Cardiovascular Society SP 436 OP 439 DO 10.1136/hrt.43.4.436 VO 43 IS 4 A1 J M Jais A1 M Marchand A1 C de Riberolles A1 C Dubuis A1 J Y Neveux A1 E Hazan YR 1980 UL http://heart.bmj.com/content/43/4/436.abstract AB Immediate and late postoperative results in 70 patients undergoing resection of a true left ventricular aneurysm (50 patients) and of an asynergic area (20 patients) are presented. The operative mortality was 14 per cent. Predicted survival by actuarial methods was 80 per cent at one year after operation and 65 per cent at six years. Functional improvement was obvious with most of the survivors falling in NYHA class I or II. Factors influencing operative mortality were the clinical indication for operation and the anatomical lesion. Late postoperative results were better for true aneurysms than for asynergic areas. An asynergic area was usually associated with multiple coronary vessel lesions and a diffusely ischaemic myocardium. An aneurysm was often associated with a single coronary vessel disease and with good function of the non-infarcted myocardiun.