Remove Chest Pain Remove Echocardiogram Remove Stent
article thumbnail

Three prehospital ECGs in patients with chest pain

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Magnus Nossen with Edits by Grauer and Smith The ECGs in today’s case are from 3 different patients all presenting with new-onset CP ( Chest Pain ). Elevated troponins prompted an echocardiogram — which revealed an apical wall motion abnormality (WMA). Patient #1 in today's post did not get expert ECG interpretation.

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

Given the presentation, the cardiologist stented the vessel and the patient returned to the ICU for ongoing critical care. Echocardiogram showed LVEF 66% with normal wall motion and normal diastolic function. He did not remember whether he had experienced any chest pain. Two subsequent troponins were down trending.

article thumbnail

Completely Wireless: First Concomitant Dual Chamber Leadless Pacemaker and Subcutaneous Defibrillator Implant

HeartRhythm

An echocardiogram showed newly reduced left ventricular ejection fraction of 30-35%. He had minimal in-stent restenosis on angiography but had only minimal cardiac enzyme elevation and did not have antecedent chest pain before either of his events.

article thumbnail

Abnormal echocardiographic finding mimicking paracardiac cystic lesion

Heart BMJ

Previous medical interventions included a spectrum of procedures, including catheter-directed thrombectomy for popliteal artery aneurysms with thrombosis, vascular bypass grafting for cerebral-anterior communicating artery aneurysms and arch replacement and stent implantation for aortic dissecting aneurysms.

article thumbnail

Opiate overdose, without chest pain or shortness of breath. Cognitive dissonance.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The 50-something patient with history of coronary stenting and slightly reduced LV ejection fraction. In the setting of prior stenting and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, would pursue a heart team revascularization approach Syntax score 28.5, Pericarditis would be even more unlikely in someone without chest pain.

article thumbnail

A man with chest pain off and on for two days, and "No STEMI" at triage.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

The patient’s chest pain spontaneously resolved before he was evaluated and has a repeat ECG obtained at 22:12 obtained shown below. In context, of course, it is clear that the patient is reperfusing, as pain has dissipated and the diagnostic findings of OMI have become more nonspecific. This ECG is more difficult.

article thumbnail

What do you think the echocardiogram shows in this case?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

A 60-something man presented by EMS with 5 hours of fairly typical sounding substernal chest pain. EMS gave 324 mg aspirin and 3 sublingual NTG, which the patient stated reduced the substernal chest pain from an 8/10 to 4/10. Pain better still. What do you think the echocardiogram shows? NTG drip started.