Remove Arrhythmia Remove Bradycardia Remove Chest Pain
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46 year old with chest pain develops a wide complex rhythm -- see many examples

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Colin Jenkins and Nhu-Nguyen Le with edits by Willy Frick and by Smith A 46-year-old male presented to the emergency department with 2 days of heavy substernal chest pain and nausea. The patient continued having chest pain. There are three mechanisms of arrhythmia: automatic, re-entry, and triggered.

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Texted from a former EM resident: 70 yo with syncope and hypotension, but no chest pain. Make their eyes roll!

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

No Chest Pain, but somnolent. The fact that this is syncope makes give it a far lower pretest probability than chest pain, but it was really more than syncope, as the patient actually underwent CPR and had hypotension on arrival of EMS. Here is the ED ECG (a photo of the paper printout) What do you think?

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

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Willy Frick A man in his 50s with history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and a 30 pack-year smoking history presented to the ER with 1 hour of acute onset, severe chest pain and diaphoresis. His ECG is shown: What do you think? That is, until the 7th R wave which comes a little bit sooner than expected. What do you think?

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Chest pain and anterior ST depression. What’s the cause(s)?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Jesse McLaren, with edits from Smith and Grauer A 60 year old with no past medical history presented with two hours of chest pain radiating to the left arm, with normal vitals. Unfortunately, the reality is — that many ( most ) WPW patients who present with chest pain do not manifest intermittent preexcitation.

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This was texted to me in real time. The patient has acute chest pain.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The patient has acute chest pain. Instead — my thoughts were as follows: The rhythm is sinus , with marked bradycardia and a component of sinus arrhythmia. Tall R wave in lead V1 and/or early transition in the chest leads ( reflecting increased "septal" forces ). WPW Cardiac arrhythmias ( especially AFib ).

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Normal angiogram one week prior. Must be myocarditis then?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The patient presented due to chest pain that was typical in nature, retrosternal and radiating to the left arm and neck. He denied any exertional chest pain. It is unclear if the patient was pain free at this time. He has a medical hx notable for hypertension, hyperlipidemia and previous tobacco use disorder.

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A woman in her 50s with chest pain and lightheadedness and "anterior subendocardial ischemia"

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Pendell Meyers A woman in her 50s presented with acute chest pain and lightheadedness since the past several hours. For our readers who enjoy the challenge of interpreting cardiac arrhythmias — today’s case offers a “gold mine” of PEARLS regarding the recognition of AV Wenckebach.