Early and 1-Year Clinical Outcome of Patients’ Evolving Non–Q-Wave Versus Q-Wave Myocardial Infarction After Thrombolysis

Abstract
Background There are few data comparing clinical outcome and potential indications for routine post–myocardial infarction cardiac catheterization and revascularization of patients who sustain a non–Q-wave versus Q-wave infarct after thrombolytic therapy. Methods and Results A secondary analysis of 2634 patients enrolled in the TIMI II trial with a first myocardial infarction was performed to determine 6-week and 1-year cardiac event rates and identify clinical and angiographic differences between the 1867 patients (70.9%) who evolved a Q-wave infarct and the 767 patients (29.1%) who sustained a non–Q-wave infarct after treatment with intravenous thrombolytic therapy. Male sex (85.3% versus 75.6%; P <.001) and anterior wall infarcts (53.8% versus 43.7%; P <.001) were more frequent in the Q-wave versus the non–Q-wave group. During recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rTPA) infusion, a greater percentage of non–Q-wave patients (37.3% versus 23.5%; P =.001) had normalization of initial ST-segment elevation. Infarct-related artery patency (TIMI flow grade 2 or 3) ( P =.02), complete infarct-related artery reperfusion (TIMI 3 flow grade) ( P <.001), and the percentage of patients with a predischarge resting left ventricular ejection fraction >55% ( P <.001) were greater in the non–Q-wave group. New congestive heart failure during hospitalization developed more frequently in Q-wave patients (18.9% versus 11.6%; P <.001). After 42 days, the occurrences of reinfarction ( P =.76), death ( P =.76), and combined death or reinfarction ( P =.43) were similar in patients assigned to the invasive or conservative postlytic management strategy, regardless of infarct type. One-year mortality was 3.4% versus 4.4% for non–Q-wave versus Q-wave infarct type, respectively ( P =.25). Conclusions Angiographic and clinical differences were observed between patients who present with initial ST-segment elevation and evolve early non–Q-wave versus Q-wave myocardial infarcts after treatment with rTPA, heparin, and aspirin. Early mortality and adverse clinical cardiac events in these patients are not significantly different after a conservative compared with an invasive treatment strategy, regardless of whether the infarct type is non–Q wave or Q wave.

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