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Progressive Cardiogenic Shock After Catheter Ablation in a Man Aged 78 Years

JAMA Cardiology

This case report discusses progressive cardiogenic shock in a man aged 78 years after catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia.

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A 50-something with Regular Wide Complex Tachycardia: What to do if electrical cardioversion does not work?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

I find AV dissociation in VT to be very difficult to differentiate from artifact, as there are always random blips on tachycardia tracings. Read this post: Idiopathic Ventricular Tachycardias for the EM Physician 2. The 15th beat (2nd beat of V1-V3) appears to be a fusion beat , which is all but diagnostic of VT. Patient intubated.

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A 53 yo woman with cardiogenic shock. Believe me, this is not what you think.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

A previously healthy 53 yo woman was transferred to a receiving hospital in cardiogenic shock. Here was the ECG: There is sinus tachycardia. Referring to Figure-1 — this 53-year old woman who presented in extremis with cardiogenic shock and an initial pH = 6.9, This was sent by a reader. and K was normal.

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Wide Complex Tachycardia; It's really sinus, RBBB + LAFB, and massive ST elevation

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Here are more examples of wide complex tachycardia: these are all a mix of ventricular tachycardia and SVT with aberrancy. He was in cardiogenic shock. There is tachycardia, and there is a wide complex. This wide complex tachycardia could easily be misdiagnosed as V tach.

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Tachycardia must make you doubt an ACS or STEMI diagnosis; put it all in clinical context

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

He was rushed by residents into our critical care room with a diagnosis of STEMI, and they handed me this ECG: There is sinus tachycardia with ST elevation in II, III, and aVF, as well as V4-V6. ACS and STEMI generally do not cause tachycardia unless there is cardiogenic shock. He had this ECG recorded. The HCO3 was 8.

STEMI 52
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See what happens when a left main thrombus evolves from subtotal occlusion to total occlusion.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Figure B At this point, with the ECG changing from diffuse ST depression to widespread ST elevation and the patient presenting in cardiogenic shock, left main coronary artery (LMCA) occlusion is the likely diagnosis. And then, 15 minutes later in today's case — this patient was in cardiogenic shock. As per Dr.

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Why the sudden shock after a few days of malaise?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Sinus tachycardia has many potential causes. This is especially true for the elderly patient with sinus tachycardia. What is the cause of the sudden tachycardia? The VSR is what is causing the cardiogenic shock! She had a very elevated troponin T at 12,335 ng/L at the time of presentation.