A 55 yo male with h/o smoking complained of 4 days of intermittent chest pain lasting up to a few hours each day. He presented to the ED pain free and had the following ECG at 1332:
The first troponin returned with "minor increase" on a qualitative troponin I, so another quantitative troponin was sent and it was elevated at 0.325 ng/ml. The patient remained pain free.
There is a suggestion of terminal T-wave inversion in V2, highly suggestive for early Wellens' syndrome. There is T-wave inversion in I and aVL diagnostic of ACS. |
The first troponin returned with "minor increase" on a qualitative troponin I, so another quantitative troponin was sent and it was elevated at 0.325 ng/ml. The patient remained pain free.
Another ECG was recorded at 1555:
The T-wave inversion is more pronounced in V2, an evolution diagnostic of Wellens' syndrome. TWI in aVL again is clearly ischemic. |
See here for classic evolution of Wellens' waves.
The patient was admitted to the hospital late on a Friday, and put on antithrombotics and antiplatelet agents. His troponin I peaked at 1.05 ng/ml that day.
On day 2, he had an echo which was suggestive of anterior wall motion abnormality. He had no ECGs that day.
Sunday AM at 0800, he had another episode of severe chest pain, waxing and waning. He had the following ECG recorded, and it is unclear whether he was having the pain at the time of the ECG.
Troponin rose again that day (day 3). So the patient was taken to the cath lab. He had no culprit, but a 50-60% narrowing of the proximal LAD.
The patient was admitted to the hospital late on a Friday, and put on antithrombotics and antiplatelet agents. His troponin I peaked at 1.05 ng/ml that day.
On day 2, he had an echo which was suggestive of anterior wall motion abnormality. He had no ECGs that day.
Sunday AM at 0800, he had another episode of severe chest pain, waxing and waning. He had the following ECG recorded, and it is unclear whether he was having the pain at the time of the ECG.
Now there are deeper and more symmetric Wellens' waves. Is this just evolution of the waves seen 2 days ago? Or did something new happen? |
Troponin rose again that day (day 3). So the patient was taken to the cath lab. He had no culprit, but a 50-60% narrowing of the proximal LAD.
Fractional Flow Reserve was performed across the lesion and it was 0.88 to 0.90 (negative, showing no blockage of flow).
Intravascular ultrasound revealed that the lesion had a minimal luminal diameter of 2.3 mm but a large plaque burden. Nevertheless, it did not appear to the angiographer to be the cause of the symptoms.
The patient went back to the wards. He had an identical episode of pain the next morning (day 4). It turns out that the patient was on an ST segment monitor and it had not been checked on day 3 after the previous episode of pain.
The patient went back to the wards. He had an identical episode of pain the next morning (day 4). It turns out that the patient was on an ST segment monitor and it had not been checked on day 3 after the previous episode of pain.
So the interventionalist went and had it printed out. Here it is, a 12-lead monitor strip:
This illustrates what Wellens' syndrome is: it is always recorded when the patient is pain free, after an episode of chest pain. The artery is always open, or the territory is supplied by good collaterals, but there is an LAD lesion that is at high risk of re-occlusion (as in this case).
Obvious anterolateral STEMI. |
This illustrates what Wellens' syndrome is: it is always recorded when the patient is pain free, after an episode of chest pain. The artery is always open, or the territory is supplied by good collaterals, but there is an LAD lesion that is at high risk of re-occlusion (as in this case).
Wellens' is the aftermath of occlusion that has reperfused. The inverted T-waves are "reperfusion T-waves."
In this case there was no clear LAD lesion. It is uncertain whether this was spasm or a case of plaque rupture with thrombosis and complete lysis.
In this case there was no clear LAD lesion. It is uncertain whether this was spasm or a case of plaque rupture with thrombosis and complete lysis.
However, aftert they went back and stented the LAD, all symptoms resolved, suggesting ruptured plaqe.