Remove Cardiac Arrest Remove Chest Pain Remove STEMI
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Chest Pain – MI Registry: What is the Risk of Ventricular Arrythmia After Primary PCI For STEMI?

American College of Cardiology

A small proportion of patients with STEMI treated via primary PCI experienced late ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation (VF), occurring one or more days following the procedure, but late VT or VF with cardiac arrest occurred rarely, especially among patients with uncomplicated STEMI, according to a study published in JAMA Network (..)

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Two patients with chest pain and RBBB: do either have occlusion MI?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Jesse McLaren Two patients in their 70s presented to the ED with chest pain and RBBB. Patient 1 : a 75 year old called paramedics with one day of left shoulder pain which migrated to the central chest, which was worse with deep breaths. Do either, both, or neither have occlusion MI? Vitals were normal.

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A man in his 50s with acute chest pain who is lucky to still be alive.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Sent by Magnus Nossen MD, written by Pendell Meyers A man in his 50s, previously healthy, developed acute chest pain. The primary care physician there evaluated this patient and deemed the chest pain to be due to gastrointestinal causes. In this case, the EMS provider was routed to the urgent care facility.

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What do you suspect from this ECG in this 40-something with SOB and Chest pain?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Let me tell you about her hospitalization, discharged 1 day prior, but it was at another hospital (I wish I had the ECG from that hospitalization): The patient is 40 years old and presented to another hospital with chest pain and SOB. She had been sitting doing work when she experienced "waves of chest tightness". Sats were 88%.

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A man in his 70s with chest pain

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Case submitted by Rachel Plate MD, written by Pendell Meyers A man in his 70s presented with chest pain which had started acutely at rest and has lasted for 2 hours. The pain was still ongoing at arrival. His initial troponin T was 15 ng/L (only two hours since pain onset). He stated it was similar to prior heart attacks.

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Resuscitated from ventricular fibrillation. Should the cath lab be activated?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

But cardiac arrest is a period of near zero flow in the coronary arteries and causes SEVERE ischemia. After cardiac arrest, I ALWAYS wait 15 minutes after an ECG like this and record another. Just as important is pretest probability: did the patient report chest pain prior to collapse?

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A Patient with Cocaine Chest Pain and Prehospital Computer interpretation of STEMI

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

A 20-something male drank heavily of ethanol and used cocaine, then was involved in a stressful verbal altercation, at which time he developed chest pain. 911 was called and the medics recorded this ECG (unfortunately, leads V4-V6 are missing) Due to marked ST Elevation, the computer read was STEMI What do you think?