CARDIOVASCULAR JOURNAL OF AFRICA • Volume 25, No 2, March/April 2014
e4
AFRICA
in the cardiac catheterization laboratory: incidence, presentation, diag-
nosis, and management.
Cathet Cardiovasc Diagn
1994;
32
: 99–107.
(PMID: 8062380).
2.
Bradfield JW, Beck G, Vecht RJ. Left ventricular apical thin point.
Br
Heart J
1977;
39
: 806–809. (PMID: 884031).
3.
Johnson KM, Johnson HE, Dowe DA. Left ventricular apical thin-
ning as normal anatomy.
J Comput Assist Tomogr
2009;
33
: 334–337.
(PMID: 19478623).
4.
Ferencik M, Abbara S, Hoffmann U, Cury RC, Brady TJ, Achenbach S.
Left ventricular thin-point detection using multidetector spiral comput-
ed tomography.
Am J Cardiol
2004;
93
: 949–951. (PMID: 15050509).
5.
Baosheng G, Jun Y, Xiaona Y, Bing H, Ying Z, Shuxi G,
et al.
Left
ventricular apical thin point viewed with two-dimensional echocardiog-
raphy.
Echocardiography
2009;
26
: 988-990.(PMID: 19968688).
6.
Fox CC, Hutchins GM. The architecture of the human ventricular
myocardium.
Johns Hopkins Med J
1972;
130
: 289–299. (PMID:
5018421).
7.
Shalev Y, Fogelman R, Oettinger M, Caspi A. Does the electrocardio-
graphic pattern of “anteroseptal” myocardial infarction correlate with
the anatomic location of myocardial injury?
Am J Cardiol
1995;
75
:
763–766. (PMID: 7717275).
8.
Bogaty P, Boyer L, Rousseau L, Arsenault M. Is anteroseptal myocar-
dial infarction an appropriate term?
Am J Med
2002;
113
: 37–41.
(PMID: 12106621).