Can ventricular wall tumors heal on their own?

Ventricular wall tumors do not heal spontaneously. Most ventricular wall tumors are secondary to acute myocardial infarction, with complete occlusion of the blood vessel as the cause and coronary atherosclerosis as the basis. Myocardial infarction leads to myocardial necrosis and increased pressure during cardiac contraction, leading to ventricular remodeling, which can trigger the development of ventricular wall tumors. Ventricular wall tumors are organic changes that do not resolve spontaneously and can lead to heart failure. In patients with ventricular wall tumors, it is important to control blood pressure levels to reduce the cardiac load and slow the progression of the disease. For patients with severe heart failure, surgery to remove the ventricular wall tumor and decongest the left ventricle may be indicated. Patients with ventricular wall tumors should have regular follow-up visits to the hospital and be treated under the guidance of the doctor, and should go to the hospital in time if they have any uncomfortable symptoms.