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Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Heart Center
Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)
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Ventricular surgery

Left ventricular reconstruction: A heart attack that occurs in the left ventricle leaves scar tissue in part of the wall, which can thin out and bulge with each heartbeat, adding to the ventricle's workload. Your heart can handle this harder pumping initially, but as time passes, the left ventricle enlarges and pumps less effectively. Combined with other heart damage, this bulging area, or aneurysm, can cause heart failure.

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Infarct exclusion surgery allows the surgeon to remove the dead heart tissue and the aneurysm, if possible, and reshape the left ventricle into a more efficiently functioning form. This procedure aims at relieving your heart failure and heart pain. It also may help your heart to pump more normally.

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