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Acute OMI or "Benign" Early Repolarization?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Willy Frick A man in his 50s with a history of hypertension, dyslipidemia, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and prior inferior OMI status post DES to his proximal RCA 3 years prior presented to the emergency department at around 3 AM complaining of chest pain onset around 9 PM the evening prior. ECG 1 What do you think? Grines, C.

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Concerning EKG with a Non-obstructive angiogram. What happened?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

link] A 62 year old man with a history of hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and carotid artery stenosis called 911 at 9:30 in the morning with complaint of chest pain. Challenge QUESTION: The relative change in T-QRS-D is not the only thing that changes during period of time that passed between recording of the 2 ECGs shown in Figure-1.

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Elbow Dislocations

REBEL EM

1998 Jan-Feb;6(1):15-23. PMID: 32644703 Robinson PM, Griffiths E, Watts AC. 2017 Jul;9(3):195-204. PMID: 27227986 Glover NM, Black AC, Murphy PB. PMID: 29681420 Gottschalk HP, Eisner E, Hosalkar HS. J Am Acad Orthop Surg. doi: 10.5435/00124635-199801000-00002. PMID: 9692937 Decker N, Norse A. 2022 Aug 2.

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Anaphylaxis, chest pain, and ST elevation in aVR

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

This pattern occurs regardless of whether the cause is ACS (decreased supply) or any other cause of decreased supply or increased demand. You must understand that this pattern does not differentiate ACS from other causes of supply/demand mismatch. ST depression will not always be present in 9/12 leads — as is seen in Figure-1.

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Is this a STEMI? No, not by definition! Why not? Why is this Important?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

A 40-something male presented with dyspnea and left arm numbness, and perhaps some chest tightness, for 1 1/2 hours. Therefore, this does not meet the definition of myocardial infarction ( 4th Universal Definition of MI ), which requires at least one troponin above the 99% reference range. But maybe not. Mokhtari et al.

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What does the angiogram show? The Echo? The CT coronary angiogram? How do you explain this?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Angiogram No obstructive epicardial coronary artery disease Cannot exclude non-ACS causes of troponin elevation including coronary vasospasm, stress cardiomyopathy, microvascular disease, etc. IMPRESSION: 1. hours T-wave are getting larger again The patient went for an angiogram at about 7 hours after arrival. Stroke-volume:50 ml.

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Judge for yourself the management of this patient with "NSTEMI, multivessel disease"

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

References: 1) See this study showing an association between morphine and mortality in Non-STE-ACS: Meine TJ, Roe M, Chen A, Patel M, Washam J, Ohman E, Peacock W, Pollack C, Gibler W, Peterson E. Despite not being considered in this category, opioid medications are sometimes given for ACS. Am Heart J.

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