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A man in his 40s with acute chest pain. What do you think?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Sent by anonymous, written by Pendell Meyers, reviewed by Smith and Grauer A man in his 40s presented to the ED with HTN, DM, and smoking history for evaluation of acute chest pain. He was eating lunch when he had sudden onset chest pressure, 9/10, radiating to his back, with sweating and numbness in both hands.

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An elderly patient with syncope, dyspnea, and weakness, but no Chest Pain, and mild hyperkalemia

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Here is the first ED ECG: COMPUTER INTERPRETATION: Electronic Atrial Pacemaker. Whenever a patient does not have chest pain, the pre-test probability of OMI is diminished. Of course SOB, jaw pain, shoulder pain, etc can be a result of OMI, but the pretest probability is less and so you must scrutinize further.

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Chest pain, shortness of breath, T wave inversion, and rising troponin in a young healthy runner.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Pendell Meyers, edits by Smith and Grauer A man in his late 20s with history of asthma presented to the ED with a transient episode of chest pain and shortness of breath after finishing a 4-mile run. His symptoms of chest pain and shortness of breath were attributed to an asthma exacerbation during exercise.

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A man in his 70s with acute chest pain and paced rhythm.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Edits by Meyers and Smith A man in his 70s with PMH of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, type 2 diabetes, CVA, dual-chamber Medtronic pacemaker, presented to the ED for evaluation of acute chest pain. American Heart Journal 170(6):1255-1264; December 2015. Sent by Pete McKenna M.D. Triage ECG: What do you think?

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A man in his 40s with epigastric pain and ST Elevation

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

See these similar cases: A man in his sixties with chest pain Why is there inferior ST elevation, and would you get posterior leads? To the left of these tracings is schematic illustration of the Emery Phenomenon ( adapted from the 2015 post by Dr. Bojana Uzelac on Armel Carmona’s ECG Rhythms website ).

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Emergency Department Syncope Workup: After H and P, ECG is the Only Test Required for Every Patient.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Check : [vitals, SOB, Chest Pain, Ultrasound] If the patient has Abdominal Pain, Chest Pain, Dyspnea or Hypoxemia, Headache, Hypotension , then these should be considered the primary chief complaint (not syncope). Aortic Dissection, Valvular (especially Aortic Stenosis), Tamponade. Syncope with Exertion (EGSYS) 7.