article thumbnail

Glorifying FAME 3, could end up as academic mischief ! “PCI, in isolation can’t beat CABG, but with FFR it can”

Dr. S. Venkatesan MD

FAME 2 Purpose FAME 2 sought to evaluate whether FFR-guided PCI plus optimal medical therapy (OMT) was superior to OMT alone in patients with stable CAD and at least one functionally significant stenosis (FFR 0.80).

article thumbnail

Arrhythmia? Ischemia? Both? Electricity, drugs, lytics, cath lab? You decide.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

In some cases the ischemia can be seen "through" the flutter waves, whereas in other cases the arrhythmia must be terminated before the ischemia can be clearly distinguished. First , there can simply be diffuse ST depressions (which obligates reciprocal STE in aVR) associated with tachycardia which are not indicative of ischemia.

article thumbnail

Abstract 45: Poor Prediction of Stroke Mimics Using Validated Stroke Mimic Scales in a Large Academic Telestroke Network

Stroke Journal

Final diagnosis of cerebral ischemia was made in 662/1043 patients (63.5%) and stroke mimic was diagnosed in 381/1043 patients (36.5%). Detailed chart review was conducted to extract both the variables needed to apply the mimic scales the final diagnosis confirmed by final imaging and discharge diagnosis (cerebral ischemic vs stroke mimic).

article thumbnail

Intravascular Imaging Can Improve Outcomes for Complex Stenting Procedures

DAIC

Dr. Stone is Director of Academic Affairs for the Mount Sinai Health System and Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) and Professor of Population Health Science and Policy at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the study chair of the ECLIPSE trial. These results extend the strong recommendations from recent U.S.

Stent 40
article thumbnail

Anterior OMI. What does the angiogram show?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

In this patient's case, the RV ischemia manifested as dramatic anterior hyperacute T waves. This degree of STE is a bit atypical for LAD ischemia. Remember that the RV is the most anterior chamber. Here is a transverse image of a CT showing this. A few clues that might have suggested this are: There is marked STE in V1.

STEMI 119
article thumbnail

50 yo with V fib has ROSC, then these 2 successive ECGs: what is the infarct artery?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

This usually represents posterior OMI, but in tachycardia and especially after cardiac arrest, this could simply be demand ischemia, residual subendocardial ischemia due to the low flow state of the cardiac arrest. This rules out subendocardial ischemia and is diagnostic of posterior OMI. V4-5 continue to show STD.

article thumbnail

Cardiac arrest, defibrillated, diffuse ST depression and ST Elevation in aVR. Why?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Again, it is common to have an ECG that shows apparent subendocardial ischemia after resuscitation from cardiac arrest, after defibrillation, and after cardioversion. and repeat the ECG, to see if the apparent ischemia persists. A third ECG was done about 25 minutes after the first: This shows resolution of all apparent ischemia.