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Figure B At this point, with the ECG changing from diffuse ST depression to widespread ST elevation and the patient presenting in cardiogenicshock, left main coronary artery (LMCA) occlusion is the likely diagnosis. Below is a still image with the red arrow indicating the subtotal LMCA stenosis. This is an ominous sign.
Angiography : LMCA — 90-99% osteal stenosis. LCx — 50-69% stenosis of the 1st marginal branch; with 100% distal LCx occlusion. The patient in today’s case presented in cardiogenicshock from proximal LAD occlusion, in conjunction with a subtotally stenosed LMCA. RCA — 100% proximal occlussion.
Why is the patient in shock? He was in profound cardiogenicshock. Both of these features make inferior + RV MI by far the most likely ( Pseudoanteroseptal MI is another name for this ) There is also sinus bradycardia and t he patient is in shock with hypotension. There is an obvious inferior STEMI, but what else?
Soon afterward, the patient’s symptoms return along with lightheadedness, bradycardia, and hypotension. The patient has also developed sinus bradycardia, which may result from right coronary artery ischemia to the SA node. The Queen of Hearts agrees: Around this time his initial high sensitivity troponin I resulted at 231 ng/L.
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