An elderly woman presented with one day of chest and right arm pain, and also abdominal pain. There was associated tingling and numbness in the right hand and generalized weakness, worse on the right side.
I sent this ECG to my "EKG Nerdz" friends, without any clinical info at all and they answered "OMI"
The Queen said: "STEMI-Equivalent with High Confidence:"
There was some question of whether the patient was having abdominal pathology, and she also had a history of aortic pathology, so a chest abd/pelvic with aorta angiogram was ordered.
If this were ACUTE (vs. SUBACUTE) OMI, that would result in an undesirable delay.
But this is clearly a subacute MI, with most of the damage done. How do I know?
1) Very high initial troponin of 45,000 ng/L
2) A full day of chest pain
3) Q-waves on the ECG, with some T-wave inversion
Here is one frame of the CT scan which includes the heart:
100% occluded ramus intermedius. The ramus is an occasional artery between the circumflex and the LAD, and often takes the place of a large first diagonal, and has the same distribution.
It was opened and stented.
Here are the troponins:
Echo:
Normal LV size and hyperdynamic systolic function with an estimated EF of 77%.
Regional wall motion abnormality--mid anterior akinesis.
Compared to TTE from 7/3/24: the anterior regional wall motion abnormality is new and is consistent with ischemia/infarction in the LAD territory
MY Comment, by KEN GRAUER, MD (11/23/2024):
- Marked artifact in the initial ECG (TOP tracing in Figure-1) — makes assessment of the limb leads difficult — since lead III (within the BLUE rectangle) is the only undistorted lead. But in a patient with CP (Chest Pain) — the T wave in this single undistorted limb lead clearly looks to be hyperacute (disproportionately "bulky" considering modest size of the QRS in this lead).
- I next looked at leads V2,V3,V4 for sign of posterior OMI — since CP + hyperacute T wave in lead III + suggestion of posterior OMI would be enough to greatly enhance my confidence of acute OMI in this initial tracing. Unfortunately — artifact distortion of the the ST segments in these 3 chest leads prevents drawing any conclusions. But, in this patient with CP — ECG #1 needs to be immediately repeated!
- As per Dr. Smith — the fact that artifact in ECG #1 is maximal in leads I and II (with lead III undistorted) — points to the RA extremity as the "culprit" (See My Comment in the December 5, 2022 post of Dr. Smith's ECG Blog for review on how to determine the "culprit" extremity within seconds).
Figure-1: The |
- Overall — the artifact is decidedly less in ECG #2. That said — Note how the "culprit" extremity has changed! Here limb lead artifact is maximal in leads I, III and aVL — with lead II no more than minimally affected. Note also that instead of the artifact distorting the entire recording of 5/6 limb leads (as it did in ECG #1) — the artifact distortion in ECG #2 is primarily of the baseline! This localizes the source of artifact to the LA electrode (rather than pointing to a tremulous RA extremity — as was the case in ECG #1, in which large amplitude artifactual deflections were seen throughout in the affected limb lead recordings).
- The rhythm is ventricular bigeminy (each of the even-numbered beats in ECG #2 is a PVC).
- That every-other-beat in ECG #2 is a PVC (and not a PAC conducted with RBBB aberration) — can be established by the fact that underlying sinus P waves continue throughout the tracing (YELLOW arrows in the long lead II rhythm strip showing on-time sinus P waves producing subtle distortion of the beginning of the ST segment of each PVC). In addition, the direction of the initial deflection in 4 of the chest leads is different for sinus beats and the PVCs (whereas sinus beats #9,11,13 in leads V1-thru-V4 all manifest an initial R wave — beas #8,10,12 all manifest an initial negative deflection).
- Consider lead aVL (within the PURPLE rectangle) — in which the most markedly abnormal ST elevation is seen in beats #4 and #6 (with the tricky aspect of beat #4 being the lead change marker that hides the QRS of beat #4).
- Lead I appears to show abnormal ST elevation in both sinus beats and the PVC in this lead — although artifact make assessment difficult in this lead.
- But BLUE arrows in lateral chest leads V5 and V6 show what appears to be disproportionately elevated J-point ST elevation in the PVC ( = beat #12).
- The November 8, 2024 post — artifact complicating OMI assessment.
- The June 15, 2024 post ( = Today's case by Dr. Frick) — re Telemetry artifact that simulates PMVT.
- The May 18, 2024 post — re the effect of baseline artifact.
- The January 15, 2024 post — for an OMI despite lots of artifact!
- The September 15, 2023 post — for PTA (Pulse-Tap Artifact).
- The April 6, 2023 post — excessive baseline artifact misdiagnosed as AFib (instead of sinus rhythm with AV Wenckebach — as in Figure-4 in this post).
- The March 17, 2023 post — for PTA.
- The January 17, 2023 post — for PTA.
- The October 21, 2022 post — for "artifactual VT".
- The November 10, 2020 post — for PTA.
- The October 17, 2020 post — for a 70-year old woman with "Artifactual VT".
- The September 27, 2019 post — for the Rowlands & Moore article with the above-noted formulas for recognizing the “culprit” extremity.
- The September 22, 2019 post — intermittent ST-T wave artifact.
- The August 26, 2019 post — baseline artifact.
- The January 30, 2018 post — for PTA.
- Brief review by Tom Bouthillet on some common causes of artifact.
- Additional review of ECG artifacts by PĂ©rez-Riera et al (Ann Noninvasic Electrocardiol 23:e12494, 2018)
- VT Artifact — by Knight et al: NEJM 341:1270-1274, 1999.
- Artifact simulating VFib — CLICK HERE.
- More VT-VFib artifact — CLICK HERE.
- Artifact simulating AFlutter — CLICK HERE.
- Parkinsonian Tremor vs AFlutter — CLICK HERE.
- Left Leg artifact — CLICK HERE.
- Should the cath lab be activated? — CLICK HERE.
- Left Arm artifact — CLICK HERE.
- More PMVT vs Torsades artifact — CLICK HERE.
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