Correct Answer: B. Anterior transmural
Anterior transmural MI causes left ventricular aneurysm because the anterior wall is supplied by the left anterior descending (LAD) artery, which is the largest coronary vessel with the widest distribution. When LAD occlusion causes transmural (full-thickness) necrosis, the entire myocardial wall is destroyed, including the supporting architecture. The infarcted wall loses contractility and becomes thin and fibrotic over weeks. The remaining viable myocardium continues to contract, creating a pressure gradient that causes the weakened anterior wall to bulge outward—forming a true aneurysm. This is a classic post-MI complication seen 2–8 weeks after anterior transmural infarction. The aneurysm wall consists of scar tissue without functional myocardium, predisposing to thrombus formation and arrhythmias. In Indian clinical practice, anterior wall MI is the most common site of post-MI aneurysm, particularly in patients with delayed presentation or inadequate revascularization.
Why the other options are wrong
A. Inferior wall — Inferior wall MI (supplied by right coronary artery) is typically subendocardial or non-transmural in most cases. Even when transmural, the inferior wall is thinner and has less wall stress during systole compared to the anterior wall. Aneurysm formation requires sustained high wall tension in a weakened transmural zone—the inferior wall's geometry and blood supply pattern make aneurysm formation rare. Inferior MI more commonly causes mechanical complications like papillary muscle rupture or ventricular septal defect. C. Posterior transmural — Posterior wall MI (supplied by right coronary or left circumflex) rarely causes aneurysm even when transmural. The posterior wall is relatively protected from high systolic wall stress because it is not the primary load-bearing chamber wall during contraction. Aneurysm formation requires the combination of transmural necrosis AND high wall tension—the posterior location does not generate sufficient mechanical stress to cause bulging of the scar tissue. D. Subendocardial — Subendocardial infarction (non-transmural) does not destroy the full thickness of the myocardial wall. The epicardial and mid-myocardial layers remain viable and provide structural support. Since the wall architecture is partially preserved, the weakened zone cannot bulge outward under systolic pressure—aneurysm formation requires complete transmural necrosis. Subendocardial MI is associated with demand ischemia and does not cause post-MI aneurysm.
High-Yield Facts
- Anterior transmural MI is the classic site for post-MI left ventricular aneurysm formation due to LAD territory and full-thickness wall destruction.
- True aneurysm consists of scar tissue (no functional myocardium) and develops 2–8 weeks post-MI; false aneurysm (rupture contained by pericardium) is a surgical emergency.
- Aneurysm wall stress is highest in anterior wall because it bears the greatest systolic load during left ventricular contraction.
- Transmural necrosis is the prerequisite—subendocardial or partial-thickness infarcts do not cause aneurysm because viable myocardium provides structural support.
- Complications of post-MI aneurysm include thrombus formation, systemic embolism, arrhythmias, and heart failure; diagnosis by echocardiography or cardiac MRI.
Mnemonics
ANTI-ANEURYSM Anterior wall → Necrosis Transmural → Injury full-thickness. Anterior wall has Need for high wall Energy, Under Repetitive Yearning (systolic stress), Scar Must bulge. LAD = Large Aneurysm Danger LAD supplies anterior wall with widest distribution and highest wall stress. Transmural LAD occlusion → anterior aneurysm. Remember: LAD territory = largest risk for post-MI aneurysm.
NBE Trap
NBE may pair "transmural MI" with any wall location to test whether students understand that transmurality alone is insufficient—wall location and systolic stress distribution are equally critical. Posterior or inferior transmural MI will not cause aneurysm, trapping those who only memorize "transmural = aneurysm."
Clinical Pearl
In Indian tertiary care, anterior wall MI with delayed presentation (>24 hours) and inadequate revascularization has the highest incidence of post-MI aneurysm. Echocardiography at 4–6 weeks post-MI is standard screening; aneurysm with thrombus requires anticoagulation or surgical resection depending on size and symptoms.
_Reference: Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Ch. 12 (Heart); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 295 (Acute Myocardial Infarction)_