This was sent to me by a former resident who is outstanding at reading ECGs for OMI.
"Hi Steve wonder what you think of this ecg in a 60 yo woman w cp, known CAD"
Presentation ECG (ECG 1):
Here is her previous from one week prior when she presented with heart failure and trops were "negative" (ECG 2):
My response: "They both look like active ischemia. The top one (ECG 1) looks like "precordial swirl", which is LAD Occlusion. The previous ECG also shows active ischemia."
The Queen of Hearts diagnosed "Subendocardial Ischemia"
More explanation: Both have some lateral precordial ST depression which looks like subendocardial ischemia. However, the presentation ECG (ECG 1) has large, bulky T-waves. By itself, it is very concerning for LAD Occlusion with Precordial Swirl morphology, but especially when comparing to the old one, those features of hyperacute T-waves really stand out.
He stated later that he gave her 1 sublingual NTG and her pain went down to 1/10. He did not repeat an ECG.
His response:
"Yeah, that’s what I was afraid of. This is a retrospective ask because with the most recent ECG (ECG 1), I admitted her with new Chest Pain and a modest troponin elevation that I thought was progression of bad multi-vessel disease but she ultimately proved to have acute LAD occlusion that didn’t go to Cath for almost 24 hrs and I’m kicking myself.
Smith: In other words, he saw it in retrospect.
"That is what I was worried about in retrospect. Big MI. They stopped trending trop at 5000 ng/L of hs trop I. EF 20% down from 50%."
"And… they hit the carotid trying to place an Impella, caused a big hematoma where she had precipitous airway occlusion. Just awful all around. I’ll check for updates and other ekgs when I log in later today."
Post cath ekg here. She’s in impella dependent cardiogenic shock w new renal failure.
Smith: "Sorry about all that."
Former Resident: "Yeah. Me too. Appreciate your feedback. I couldn’t get anyone else to agree with me on the OMI findings even in retrospect and it was driving me crazy."
Smith: In other words, no one else could see the OMI, even in retrospect. I could see it because Pendell and I have described and coined the term "Precordial Swirl". We have a paper In Press at the Journal of Electrocardiology that defines it based on a lot of data. The Queen of Hearts did not diagnose OMI, but she did see ischemia.
Refractory ischemia needs the cath lab emergently.
When can you say that the ischemia has resolved and the patient does not need emergent angiography?
Both:
1) Pain is resolved completely
2) ST depression is competely resolved
In this case, the pain was still 1/10. He told me that he did not see any inpatient notes about the presence or absence of pain. He did not get a repeat ECG after the NTG.
SUMMARY: This devastating OMI could have been reperfused quickly if the presence of refractory pain had been acted upon, regardless of the ECG. Troponin was elevated and pain was refractory. Why was it not acted upon? I can't say I know for certain. This former resident is one of the smartest and most diligent I have ever known, but the pressure to not activate the cath lab because of a possible false positive activation is intense.
It is better to have a false positive activation than it is to have a disaster like this, and all members of the team should be encouraged to support taking the patient for angiogram when there is any doubt!!

MY Comment, by KEN GRAUER, MD (3/27/2025):
- This 60-year old woman clearly presented to the ED as a higher-risk patient — given her history of known coronary disease, now with new chest pain.
- To facilitate comparison in Figure-1 — I've put today's initial ECG (TOP tracing) — together with this patient's previous ECG from 1 week earlier (LOWER tracing). Of note — Troponin was normal at the time ECG #2 was recorded, so there was no acute infarction in association with this tracing.
- The Clinical Reality: If you do not keep both tracings close to each other as you go lead-by-lead comparing ECG findings — You will miss subtle abnormalities. I believe this was the problem in today's case.
- The rhythm in ECG #2 is sinus at ~75/minute, with several early beats. The PR interval is normal — the QRS is narrow — and the QTc may be borderline prolonged.
- There is marked left axis, consistent with LAHB (Left Anterior HemiBlock).
- Voltage criteria for LVH are satisfied (R wave in lead aVL ≥12 mm).
- There is poor R wave progression with delayed transition (The R wave does not get taller than the S wave is deep until between leads V5-to-V6).
- Regarding ST-T wave findings — There is fairly diffuse ST segment flattening with slight depression in multiple leads — with ST coving and slight elevation in lead aVR.
- Impression: Although the downsloping ST depression in high lateral leads I and aVL could reflect LV "strain" — the overall picture in this tracing is that of DSE (Diffuse Subendocardial Ischemia). That said — We are told that Troponins were negative at the time this ECG was recorded. So, while ECG #2 may be indicative of significant (even multi-vessel) coronary disease — it is not diagnostic of acute coronary occlusion.
- What differences do YOU see between the 2 tracings?
- The most concerning difference in ST-T wave morphology between ECG #1 and ECG #2 — is seen within the RED rectangle. In this patient with new CP (Chest Pain) — Isn't it much easier to appreciate the taller T waves in leads V1,V2,V3 with these 2 ECGs placed next to each other?
- I thought the ST-T waves in each of the 4 leads highlighted by BLUE arrows looked more acute (ie, with more angled and deeper ST depression).
- Lead aVR shows more ST elevation.
- Isn't it much easier to recognize subtle-but-important differences between 2 serial tracings by putting both ECGs next to each other, and then going lead-by-lead in your assessment?
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