article thumbnail

ECG Cases 45 ECG in Weakness and Neurological Symptoms

ECG Cases

Jesse MacLaren guides us through 10 cases of patients who present with generalized weakness or acute neurologic symptoms and discusses how to look for ECG signs of dysrhythmias, electrolyte emergencies, acute coronary occlusion, and demand ischemia in patients with generalized weakness and in patients with neurologic symptoms, to consider predisposing (..)

article thumbnail

PO-02-038 LACK OF ATRIAL BRANCH PERFUSION DURING ACUTE ISCHEMIA IS NOT ASSOCIATED WITH NEW-ONSET ATRIAL FIBRILLATION DURING STEMI

HeartRhythm

Atrial fibrillation (AF) often complicates ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Atrial ischemia due to non-perfused atrial branches may contribute to underlying mechanisms.

article thumbnail

PO-06-191 TRANSCATHETER EXTRACTION OF A FOSSA OVALIS FLAP PRESENTING AS ACUTE STROKE POST ATRIAL FIBRILLATION ABLATION

HeartRhythm

Strokes and silent ischemia remain a serious complication of atrial fibrillation catheter ablation (AFCA). This is mainly due to extensive ablation lesions in the left atrium that create large areas of endothelial injury that produces prothrombotic states during and after AFCA.

article thumbnail

Syncope and Atrial fibrillation in a Healthy 70-something Male

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

PMH: Known paroxysmal Atrial fib. He is usually is in sinus rhythm as far as he knows, but he cannot subjectively feel atrial fibrillation, so he is never completely certain when he is in sinus or atrial fib. Here is his ECG: Atrial Fib with a Ventricular Response of about 66. He immediately completely recovered.

article thumbnail

What is strange about this paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in an otherwise healthy patient? And what happened after giving ibutilide?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Her Apple Watch suddenly told her that she is in atrial fibrillation. Patients with healthy AV nodes who are not on AV nodal blockers and who are not hyperkalemic should have a rapid ventricular response if they have paroxysmal Atrial fibrillation. Exam was completely normal except for an irregular heart rate.

article thumbnail

Diffuse Subendocardial Ischemia on the ECG. Left main? 3-vessel disease? No!

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

DISCUSSION: The 12-lead EKG EMS initially obtained for this patient showed severe ischemia, with profound "infero-lateral" ST depression and reciprocal ST elevation in lead aVR. The ECG cannot diagnose the etiology of ischemia; it only the presence of ischemia, from whatever etiology.

article thumbnail

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

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Pendell Meyers First try to interpret this ECG with no clinical context: The ECG shows an irregularly irregular rhythm, therefore almost certainly atrial fibrillation. After an initially narrow QRS, there is a very large abnormal extra wave at the end of the QRS complex. There is also large T wave inversion and long QT.

Blog 137