A 40-something woman with diabetes and peripheral vascular disease who frequently needs the ED for chronic pain called 911 for sudden severe chest pain. The patient was very agitated and could not hold still.
I greeted medics at the door to view the prehospital ECG.
Here it is:
The patient was quite agitated and needed sedation.
Because of this, it was very difficult to record an ED ECG, but eventually it became possible:
The estimated left ventricular ejection fraction is 34%
Regional wall motion abnormality-lateral, akinetic.
Regional wall motion abnormality-inferior base (this is the posterior wall).
This is most consistent with ischemia/infarction in the distribution of
the left circumflex coronary artery.
Learning Points.
1. We have shown that ANY ST depression maximal in V1-V4 is 96% specific for posterior OMI.
Meyers, Bracey, Smith, et al. Journal of the American Heart Association. Ischemic ST depression maximal in V1-V4 (vs. V5-V6) of any amplitude, is specific for Occlusion Myocardial Infarction (vs. non-occlusive ischemia)
2. Posterior leads are unnecessary in this situation and although they could be helpful, there is a risk that they will dissuade you from making the accurate diagnosis of posterior OMI.
3. OMI that are not STEMI can be very subtle and difficult to diagnose even though the findings are very specific.
4. In many such cases, it is not the ECG which is nonspecific; it is the interpreter who is nonspecific.
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MY Comment, by KEN GRAUER, MD (9/21/2022):
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- Failure of posterior leads to consistently demonstrate ST elevation in association with subtle posterior OMI — should not be surprising. This is because posterior placement of leads V7, V8 and V9 situates these leads in a position from which electrical activity must pass through the thick musculature of the back before being recorded on the ECG. As a result — even under optimal circumstances, QRST amplitudes (and therefore the amount of ST-T wave elevation) in posterior leads is often modest.
- In the years since I first proposed this visual aid — I have used it to identify many hundreds of posterior infarctions within seconds — and without need to delay management (or transport of the patient) in order to record additional (ie, posterior) leads. The standard 12-lead ECG is all that is needed.
- Figure-1 — shows the rational for the Mirror Test (ie, the anterior leads provide a mirror image of electrical activity in the posterior wall). By simply inverting a standard 12-lead ECG, and then holding it up to the light — you can easily visualize the "mirror-image" of leads V1-thru-V4.
- With a little bit of practice — it becomes EASY to recognize the "shelf-like" (flat) shape of ST depression — that looks like a stemi when this image is inverted.
- Posterior infarctions often (though not always) result in an increase in R wave amplitude in anterior leads. The taller anterior R waves become — the more this looks like a deepening Q wave when the image is inverted.
- KEY Point: If instead of seeing a comparable diffuse amount of ST depression in chest (and limb) leads — you see maximal ST depression in leads V2, V3 and/or V4 — THINK posterior infarction! Inverting the image (ie, applying the Mirror Test) then facilitates recognizing the characteristic ST-T wave depression shape indicative of posterior infarction.
- NOTE: Because you are not having to traverse the thick back musculature to record a standard ECG (as you have to do when recording posterior leads) — the relative amplitude of ST-T wave segment deviations tends to be significantly larger than the ST-T wave amplitude seen with posterior leads. This is why I believe the Mirror Test is superior to use of posterior leads.
- EDITORIAL Note: I do not believe I have ever seen a case in which a posterior infarction diagnosed by posterior leads was not evident by use of the Mirror Test on the standard 12-lead ECG. But as Dr. Smith illustrates in today's case — the opposite is not true (ie, Today's patient was correctly diagnosed on ECG as having posterior OMI despite the complete lack of ST elevation in posterior leads).
Figure-1: Illustration of the rational for the Mirror Test (Figure excerpted from Grauer K: ECG-2014 Pocket Brain ePub). |
- Of NOTE — The fairly large Q waves seen in the inferolateral leads in ECG #2 are not new! Instead — comparable Q waves were seen in the prior baseline ECG, suggesting this patient had a prior infarction.
- What is new — is lateral ST elevation, which is marked in lateral chest leads V5,V6 — and which is subtle-but-present in high-lateral leads I and aVL. This lateral ST elevation was not present on the earlier tracing.
- What is also new — is subtle-but-real "shelf-like" ST depression that is maximal in leads V3 and V4 (and hinted at in lead V2).
- QUESTION: Isn't it EASIER in the mirror-image (inverted) views of leads V2,V3,V4 to appreciate that this shape of anterior ST depression in this patient with new-onset chest pain is diagnostic of acute posterior OMI (ie, This is a positive Mirror Test).
- To Emphasize — Comparison of ECG #2 with the prior baseline tracing confirms that the ST depression in ECG #2 is clearly new! But before I looked at the prior tracing — I already knew from the positive Mirror Test that the shelf-like (flattened) shape of the depressed ST segments in leads V3 and V4 was clearly abnormal — and indicative of acute posterior OMI until proven otherwise.
- Although ST-T wave changes in lead V2 are much more subtle than what we see in leads V3 and V4 — given that the T wave is typically upright in lead V2 and the ST segment is usually sightly elevated in this lead as a normal finding — I knew that in a patient with new chest pain, the ST-T wave appearance in lead V2 was not normal.
- Putting It All Together — As stated, the inferior Q waves (and inferior infarction) in ECG #2 is old. But the combination of lateral lead ST elevation + the positive Mirror Test in leads V2,V3,V4 — indicated acute posterolateral OMI, which strongly suggested the "culprit" artery to be a branch of the LCx (Left Circumflex). This was confirmed on cath.
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Selected LINKS for More on the Mirror Test:
- ECG Blog #246 — Reviews the concept of the "Mirror Test" with a clinical example.
- The February 10, 2022 post in Dr. Smith's ECG Blog — My Comment (at the bottom of the page) illustrates the Mirror Test in a case with posterior reperfusion waves (ie, tall anterior T waves).
- The March 21, 2023 post —
- The January 23, 2023 post —
- The July 16, 2022 post —
- The May 3, 2022 post —
- The January 3, 2022 post —
- The October 11, 2020 post in
- The September 28, 2020 post in
- The September 21, 2020 post —
- The February 16, 2019 post —
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