Remove 2020 Remove Bradycardia Remove Ischemia
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Normal angiogram one week prior. Must be myocarditis then?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The ECG does not show any definite signs of ischemia. It is unclear if the patient was pain free at this time. In fact, the ECG was described as normal, and without serial ECGs or prior ECGs for comparison it could be. Initial high sensitivity troponin I returned at 6ng/L (normal 0.20

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Serial ECGs for chest pain: at what point would you activate the cath lab?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Below is the first ECG recorded by paramedics after 2 hours of chest pain, interpreted by the machine as “possible inferior ischemia”. There’s competing sinus bradycardia and junctional rhythm, with otherwise normal conduction, borderline right axis, normal R wave progression and voltages. What do you think?

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What is this ECG finding? Do you understand it before you hear the clinical context?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Altered Mental Status, Bradycardia == MY Comment , by K EN G RAUER, MD ( 2/2 /2024 ): == Dr. Meyers began today’s case with the clinical challenge of asking you to identify the underlying cause of ECG #2. -- Read this ECG -- Osborn Waves and Hypothermia (this is the "Figure" above) What does LBBB look like in severe hypothermia?

Blog 137
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A 50-something with chest pain. Is there OMI? And what is the rhythm?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

I will leave more detailed rhythm discussion to the illustrious Dr. Ken Grauer below, but this use of calipers shows that the rhythm interpretation is: Sinus bradycardia with a competing (most likely junctional) rhythm. The fact that R waves 2 through 6 are junctional does make ischemia more difficult to interpret -- but not impossible.

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ECG Blog #392 — Repolarization T Waves?

Ken Grauer, MD

I see the following: The rhythm is sinus bradycardia at ~55-60/minute. ECG Blog #184 — illustrates the "magical" mirror-image opposite relationship with acute ischemia between lead III and lead aVL ( featured in Audio Pearl #2 in this blog post ). The PR and QRS intervals are both normal. ECG Blog #230 — How to compare serial ECGs.

Blog 145
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This middle-aged patient presented with SOB, weakness, and mild pulmonary edema.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

There are 3 etiologies I always think of with bradycardia and AV block: 1. There was no evidence of ischemia. In addition to ruling out rate-slowing medication serum electrolyte disorders and/or ischemia/infarction as potential causes of bradyarrhythmias one should also rule out hypothyroidism + sleep apnea. Hyperkalemia.

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7 steps to missing posterior Occlusion MI, and how to avoid them

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Sinus bradycardia, normal conduction, normal axis, normal R wave progression, no hypertrophy. 2] Here there is no posterior ST elevation, but the anterior ST depression is also less—so it is dynamic, confirming acute ischemia. What do you think? But it is still STEMI negative.

STEMI 52