Can you recover from an inferior wall infarction?

Cannot.
Inferior wall infarction refers to the blockage of the coronary arteries in the lower wall of the heart, resulting in ischemia and necrosis of the heart muscle cells, which is an irreversible injury that cannot be fully recovered.
The main cause of lower wall myocardial infarction is coronary atherosclerosis, plaque detachment blocking the right coronary artery caused by a series of symptoms such as chest tightness, shortness of breath, chest pain. Its treatment has:
1. General treatment: bed rest, oxygen, monitoring blood pressure, respiration, and establishment of intravenous access.
2. Relieve pain: morphine, pethidine, sodium nitroprusside, metoprolol, etc. can be used.
3. Antiplatelet therapy: aspirin, clopidogrel and other drugs can be used.
4. Anticoagulation therapy: patients without active bleeding and other contraindications to anticoagulation need to use heparin, low molecular heparin and other drugs.
5. Reperfusion myocardial therapy: including percutaneous coronary intervention, emergency coronary artery bypass grafting, and thrombolytic therapy with drugs such as urokinase or streptokinase.
6. Lipid regulation therapy: early use of drugs such as simvastatin and atorvastatin.
7. ACEI or ARB: such as enalapril and irbesartan can improve the remodeling of the myocardium during the recovery period.
At the same time, the condition should be closely observed to see if there is a combination of right ventricular myocardial infarction, and if necessary, anti-shock treatment such as fluid infusion and volume expansion should be carried out.
If chest tightness and shortness of breath and chest pain persist unrelieved, it is recommended to consult a doctor in time and follow the doctor’s instructions, so as not to delay the condition and cause adverse consequences.
Myocardium that has been necrotic can not be recovered, but timely and effective treatment can protect the damaged but not completely necrotic myocardium and stop the progression of the disease, as a patient, need to be under the guidance of a physician for treatment to minimize the impact of myocardial infarction on the body.