Anterior interstitial myocardial infarction may lead to serious complications such as heart failure and shock, and requires prompt medical attention for drug or surgical treatment. Anterior interstitial myocardial infarction is one of the types of myocardial infarction in which the infarcting vessel may be the left anterior descending artery, which, if not treated acutely and in time, may lead to serious complications such as severe arrhythmias, heart failure, cardiogenic shock, papillary muscle rupture, and ventricular wall tumor. Further development can even be life-threatening and is more dangerous requiring timely intervention. For acute anterior wall myocardial infarction, thrombolytic therapy with drugs such as urokinase can be used; for acute anterior wall myocardial infarction with onset time of less than 12 hours and persistent ST-segment elevation, percutaneous coronary intervention is recommended. Anterior wall myocardial infarction is more dangerous, must immediately go to the hospital for treatment; urokinase is absolutely prohibited unauthorized use of drugs.