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Acute chest pain and ST Elevation. CT done to look for aortic dissection.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Due to the chest pain radiating into the patient's back, the ER physician ordered CTA chest to rule out aortic dissection. The cardiologist agreed that the ECG was suggestive of STEMI, but the facility's cath lab was apparently not available and he therefore recommended emergent transfer to a cath capable facility.

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Microvascular Resistance Predicts Outcome After PCI in STEMI

All About Cardiovascular System and Disorders

Microvascular resistance evaluated whether the vasodilatory reserve capacity of coronary microcirculation was restored in the infarcted territory, regardless of concomitant epicardial coronary artery disease and aortic pressure. Immediate Microvascular Physiology After Mechanical Coronary Reperfusion of STEMI. J Am Coll Cardiol.

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ECG Cases 42 – Approach to ECG Interpretation in Patients with Chest Pain: OMI, False Positive & Negative STEMI & Other Causes

ECG Cases

In this ECG Cases blog we look at 10 cases of patients with chest pain, including false positive STEMI, false negative STEMI, and other causes to help hone your ECG interpretation skills in time-sensitive cases where those very ECG skills might save a life.

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ECG Cases 34 – ECG Interpretation in Aortic Dissection

ECG Cases

Which patients with ECG evidence of coronary occlusion require a CT scan to rule out aortic dissection? What are the range of ECG findings in acute aortic dissection and how do they change management? Dr. Jesse McLaren guides us through 9 cases to answer these and other questions on ECG interpretation in aortic dissection.

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An undergraduate who is an EKG tech sees something. The computer calls it completely normal. How about the physicians?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The Queen of Hearts disagrees, diagnosing OMI with high confidence: Case Continued: The EKG was not immediately recognized by the emergency provider, who ordered a CT scan to rule out aortic dissection at 1419. Most STEMI have peak troponin I over 1000 ng/L and most NSTEMI below that level.

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Do you need to be a trained health care professional to diagnose subtle OMI on the ECG?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The provider had sent the patient for an aortic dissection scan which had shown extremely heavy calcification of the LAD.

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Why the sudden shock after a few days of malaise?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Left ventricular afterload reduction is essential to decrease the trans-se ptal pressure gradient and thus decrease shunt volume, making a larger proportion of the blood flow from the left ventricle through the aortic valve. A mong patients with STEMI, ventricular septal rupture is the most common and free wall rupture is the least common.