This case was sent by Peter Hammarlund, 2nd year Internal Medicine/Cardiology resident (and self-proclaimed ECG nerd) at Helsingborg Hospital, Sweden.
Peter frequently sends me great cases like this, but I never post them because the Swedish standard, explained below, is very difficult to interpret.
This time I could not resist.
Especially interesting is the troponin data and the manipulated images seen below.
Case
Peter's response:
Peter frequently sends me great cases like this, but I never post them because the Swedish standard, explained below, is very difficult to interpret.
This time I could not resist.
Especially interesting is the troponin data and the manipulated images seen below.
Case
Hi Steve,
I was involved in this highly interesting case just the other week.
A previously healthy young man (in his 20s), who smokes two cigarettes a day and has a family history of MI (his father had his first MI in his early 50s), was brought to our ED by ambulance with severe central chest pain without radiation for one hour. The pain was not relieved by Nitroglycerine and only slightly relieved by morphine.
Smith comment: do NOT use morphine until you are either:
1) committed to the cath lab (or other definitive diagnostic modality, such as CT for dissection or PE)
or
2) CERTAIN that the pain is not due to serious pathology.
Case continued
He was tachycardic, but his vitals were otherwise initially normal.
The initial high sensitivity troponin T was 5 ng/L.
(99% reference is 14 ng/L, or less than 15 ng/L; Level of detection is 5 ng/L).
I was working in our CCU when the cardiology consultant (who was sitting right next to me) got a phone call from the ED doctor taking care of the patient. While he presented the case to the consultant we looked at the prehospital ECG (attached as EKG1, time 7.53 am) and the ED ECG (attached as EKG2, time 8.10 am).
At the moment (time 10.45 am) the patient was in the radiology department performing a CT aorta, but right after the CT he developed shortness of breath and only had a saturation of 88% with 15 L/min of O2.
I was immediately very worried about the patient when I saw the ECGs.
What do you say? My answer is below.
Note on technique: These are recorded at the Swedish standard of 50 mm/second. So all intervals appear twice as wide as you are accustomed to! Furthermore, there is only one average complex per lead.
What do you think? |
Here is my answer, after a quick glance:
Peter,
Hyperacute T-waves are developing over 17 minutes in V2-V4. LAD occlusion or at least dynamic thrombus.
Steve
As an afterthought just this minute before posting, I compressed the ECGs to 25mm/sec. The difference becomes much more obvious to me:
Smith comment: The ST depression is due to early, and possibly incomplete, LAD occlusion, which is often called "de Winter's T-waves" a type of hyperacute T-wave. 17 minutes later the artery is completely occluded and the ST depression has become ST elevation.
There should NEVER be ANY ST depression in the precordial leads of a young man.
Peter's response:
You are of course spot on. Me and my colleague saw this immediately, and since these ECGs were recorded 2½ hours before the consultant got the phone call we were very worried about the patient.
EKG3 (not shown) was recorded 2.5 hours later (Smith comment: treatment was very delayed!) during the consultation and the diagnosis was now obvious with a huge anterolateral STEMI. The providers had not noticed the ST depression nor the diagnostic T-waves.
Echo hadn't been performed initially, but showed EF 40% and akinesis of the anterior wall. CT of the aorta was of course normal. CT of the lungs showed bilateral infiltrates with gravitational distribution, that initially were interpreted by the radiologist as infectious, but in retrospect were considered to be flash pulmonary edema.
The patient went for coronary angiography that showed an almost complete occlusion in the distal part of LM with a stenosis extending into the proximal part of the LAD.
During PCI the patient needed CPAP and small doses of norepinephrine. He was fully revascularized and was initially admitted to the ICU, but could be moved to the coronary care unit the next day. A formal echo a couple of days later showed EF 50%. The hospitalization was prolonged, due to the development of fever and a small pericardial effusion (postinfarction syndrome?), but otherwise the patient did OK.
This case was up for discussion the next day in our clinic, and I pointed out the subtle, but real dynamic changes, that might have been picked up, not delaying the diagnosis for another 2½ hours.
Many of my colleagues still considered the initial ECGs to be practically normal, although I pointed out that these findings might be considered non-specific if the patient was presenting with e.g. cellulitis in the leg, but highly worrisome in this particular case, since the patient was having ongoing chest pain.
Another thing that made the case a bit more complicated was that the initial hs-Troponin T was only 5 ng/L (positive at < 15 ng/L, level of detection at 5) i.e. not positive, but just above the level of detection. This was when the chest pain had been going on for a little more than one hour.
I think that the ED physician might have been fooled by this. The next troponin measurement in the ICU (6 hours after the onset of chest pain) showed a level of >9998 ng/L.
In retrospect this was indeed a tricky case, but as I pointed out to my colleagues we should learn from it rather than just call it tricky and convince ourselves that it was unavoidable.
Regarding the use of your formula: I believe if you use it on the 2nd ECG it comes out positive with a value of 23.678 (if I measured correctly using 2.5 mm of STE at 60 ms, QTc of 428 and RV4 of 14 mm) clearly indicating subtle STEMI. (A value greater than 23.4 is nearly diagnostic of LAD occlusion in the right circumstances)
Here I have superimposed the ECGs so that you can see the evolution more clearly. The darker lines are the second ECG at time = 17 minutes after the first:
Notice the significant increase in T-wave amplitude in V3 and V4. Notice also the new but subtle ST Elevation in I and aVL, with reciprocal ST depression in lead III. The formula is negative in the 1st ECG due to minimal STE at 60 ms after the J-point in lead V3. (Remember that 60 ms in this recording format is 3 little boxes, not 1.5) The formula is positive in the 2nd ECG. Referring to: Formula for differentiating normal STE from STE due to LAD occlusion |
Here it is compressed:
Take home points:
1) Young people do have MI.
2) Beware hyperacute T-waves
3) Beware any ST depression in precordial leads
4) Do not mask your diagnosis with Morphine (or other opiates)
Serial ECGs would probably have made the difference in this case.
5) Echo is very helpful in these situations.
4) Don't rely on the first troponin, even if high sensitivity (if there is a short time from the onset of chest pain to the blood testing)
//Peter
Comment on the formatting:
In Sweden the different leads usually are presented in the so called Cabrera sequence, which basically means that lead aVR is replaced by -aVR (i.e. aVR with switched polarity, which gives the lead an “up-side-down” appearance) and that the limb leads are presented in a anatomically contiguous order (aVL = -30°; I = 0°; -aVR = 30°; II = 60°; aVF = 90° and III = 120°). This means that the inferior leads are presented next to each other (vertically) and that the high lateral leads (aVL and I) are placed next to each other with -aVR in between. This makes it easier to spot ST-T-changes localized to a specific anatomic area of the heart (at least if you are used to the formatting).
In this case the recordings also have another feature. The tracings that are recorded with a paper speed of 50 mm/s are so called signal-averaged ECGs. There is only one complex presented in each lead, which is an artificially created “mean value” of several ECG complexes. The point of this is to eliminate artifacts.
On the right side (not shown here) we display short rhythm strips at a paper speed of 12,5 mm/s (thereby looking twice as fast as usual if you’re accustomed to a paper speed of 25 mm/s).