Remove Cardiac Arrest Remove Chest Pain Remove Echocardiogram
article thumbnail

VF arrest at home, no memory of chest pain. Angiography non-diagnostic. Does this patient need an ICD? You need all the ECGs to know for sure.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Echocardiogram showed LVEF 66% with normal wall motion and normal diastolic function. However, he did not remember much from the day of the arrest. He did not remember whether he had experienced any chest pain. Two subsequent troponins were down trending.

article thumbnail

An intoxicated, agitated, 29 year old with chest pain

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

He complained of severe chest pain and was extremely agitated, so much so that he was throwing chairs in triage. Some time later, reperfusion T-waves developed (analogous to Wellens' waves): Case 3 Here is a case of a 30-something otherwise healthy male with chest pain: There is neither an S-wave nor J-wave in lead V3.

article thumbnail

Understanding an Enlarged Heart (Cardiomegaly): Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment

MIBHS

Chest X-Ray A chest X-ray is often the first imaging test conducted, as it can reveal whether the heart is enlarged and by how much. Echocardiogram An echocardiogram uses sound waves to produce a detailed image of the heart, allowing doctors to see the size of the heart chambers and how well the heart is pumping blood.

article thumbnail

A 40-something presented after attempted prehospital resuscitation with persistent Ventricular Fibrillation

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Two recent interventions have proven in randomized trials to improve neurologic survival in cardiac arrest: 1) the combination of the ResQPod and the ResQPump (suction device for compression-decompression CPR -- Lancet 2011 ) and 2) Dual Sequential defibrillation. Formal Echocardiogram: Normal left ventricular size and wall thickness.

article thumbnail

Why is ECG machine use? What diseases can EKG monitor detect?

Wellnest

However, an echocardiogram is a different test, also conducted for heart activity. If you experience any symptoms, such as chest pain, dizziness, unusual tiredness or fatigue, shortness of breath, or irregular heartbeat, your doctor would want you to go for an ECG test to find out the underlying cause.

article thumbnail

Abstract 4135360: Eosinophilic Myocarditis: An Atypical Presentation with a Labile Course: A Case Report

Circulation

Case presentation:A 64-year-old man presented with one day of chest pain. Initial evaluation showed elevated cardiac enzymes (CE) and normal eosinophil count. Transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) showed an ejection fraction (EF) of 40% and a moderate-large pericardial effusion with signs of tamponade.

article thumbnail

A man in his 70s with weakness and syncope

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Pendell Meyers A man in his 70s with no cardiac history presented with acute weakness, syncope, and fever. He denied chest pain or shortness of breath. In the clinical context of weakness and fever, without chest pain or shortness of breath, the likelihood of Brugada pattern is obviously much higher.