article thumbnail

Defining Appropriate Responses in a Tiered System

High Performance EMS

Some computer-aided dispatch (CAD) software did better than others by considering the average travel time of an actual route instead of allowing nearness to be determined by a straight-line distance. It was a matter of determining which crew was available closest to the scene.

BLS 264
article thumbnail

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. This was deemed “non-specific” by the ED physicians.

Coronary 290
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Episode 191: Rapid Atrial Fibrillation

Core EM

Hosts: Brian Gilberti, MD Jonathan Kobles, MD [link] Download Leave a Comment Tags: Cardiology Show Notes Understanding AF with RVR Categories General AF with RVR: Definition and basic understanding. Metoprolol Considerations: Dosing (5 mg every 10-15 minutes, max 15 mg), benefits in CAD and HF, limitations in asthma/COPD patients.

CAD 130
article thumbnail

A 29 year old male with chest pain, ST Elevation, and very elevated troponin T

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

By Magnus Nossen This ECG is from a young man with no risk factors for CAD, he presented with chest pain. Before the lab values returned this patient had a n emergent coronary CT angiogram done that ruled out CAD. How would you assess this ECG? How confident are you in your assessment? What is your next step? at ~100/minute ).

article thumbnail

Critical Left Main

EMS 12-Lead

My thought process in the moment was that leads aVL and V2 display an ST-segment that is “inappropriately baseline” – not elevated, by definition, but may very well be an equivalent of such as the ischemic zone is actively “pushing” them in an upward manner. It is accelerated angina, which is by definition not stable.

Coronary 130
article thumbnail

Is this OMI reperfused or active?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

No prior similar symptoms or known CAD. Here is the repeat 12 Lead ECG approximately 20 minutes later (still pain free) Now it shows definite reperfusion More inferior T-wave inversion Less STD in V2, V3. He took two full strength aspirin prior to EMS arrival. The pain was relieved by one prehospital NTG spray.

OR 69
article thumbnail

A young peripartum woman with Chest Pain

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

However, a smooth tapering of the mid-RCA was seen, highlighted in red below: How do we explain the MI if no sign of CAD was found? This MI wasn’t caused by a ruptured plaque of CAD - it was a coronary artery dissection of the RCA. Lead-by-lead comparison of ECGs #1 and #2 shows definite improvement.