Remove Embolism Remove Ischemia Remove Pulmonary
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A man in his 50s with shortness of breath

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

There is also STE in lead III with reciprocal depression in aVL and I, as well as some subendocardial ischemia pattern with STD in V5-V6 and STE in aVR. Aslanger's is a combination of acute inferior OMI plus subendocardial ischemia, and due to the ischemia vectors , it has STE only in lead III. Moreover, there is tachycardia.

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Elder Male with Syncope

EMS 12-Lead

Many of the changes seen are reminiscent of LVH with “strain,” and downstream Echo may very well corroborate such a suspicion, but since the ECG isn’t the best tool for definitively establishing the presence of LVH, we must favor a subendocardial ischemia pattern, instead. The CXR demonstrated no pulmonary edema. Type I ischemia.

Ischemia 116
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ECG Cases 43 – ECG Interpretation in Shortness of Breath

ECG Cases

We discover that for STEMI/OMI vs subendocardial ischemia, we should look for STEMI(-)OMI, subacute OMI, and OMI in the presence of LBBB and RBBB, and consider the differential for diffuse ST depression with reciprocal ST elevation in aVR.

STEMI 98
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A man in his 30s with cardiac arrest and STE on the post-ROSC ECG

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

In terms of ischemia, there is both a signal of subendocardial ischemia (STD max in V5-V6 with reciprocal STE in aVR) AND a signal of transmural infarction of the inferior wall with Q wave and STE in lead III with reciprocal STD in I and aVL. The rhythm is atrial fibrillation. The QRS complex is within normal limits.

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Syncope, Shock, AV block, Large RV, "Anterior" ST Elevation.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

There is ST depression beyond the end of the wide QRS in I, II, aVF, and V4-V6, diagnostic of with subendocardial ischemia. It makes pulmonary embolism (PE) very likely. The small LV implies very low LV filling pressures, which implies low pulmonary venous pressure. Possible, but huge pulmonary embolism is more likely.

STEMI 40
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50 yo with V fib has ROSC, then these 2 successive ECGs: what is the infarct artery?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

This usually represents posterior OMI, but in tachycardia and especially after cardiac arrest, this could simply be demand ischemia, residual subendocardial ischemia due to the low flow state of the cardiac arrest. This rules out subendocardial ischemia and is diagnostic of posterior OMI. V4-5 continue to show STD.

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RBBB with dynamic T-waves

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

He had a history of pulmonary embolism but was no longer on coumadin and states the pain is different. Here are V1-V3 from the last 3 ECGs: It is now clear that there is cardiac ischemia. 56 y/o male who presented with 12/10 severe chest pain starting at 3AM, radiating to his upper back. Wraparound? It was negative.