This is by Magnus Nossen, from Norway
The patient is a 70 something male with a hx of hypertension and tobacco use disorder. He is otherwise healthy. The patient contacted EMS after a few hours of chest pain that started 5:30 AM. The pain was described as 6/10 radiating to the right shoulder. Vital signs were within normal limits, and the patient was not ill appearing. The chest pain was described as both sharp and pressure like. The ECG below was recorded and electronically transferred to our PCI center for evaluation.
What is your interpretation? Would you be worried? Be aware of the lead layout. Limb leads are presented in the Cabrera format. On the left 50mm/s (standard in Norway) On the right the image width has been reduced by 50%, effectively converting the image to 25mm/s.
Generally when patients are accepted for emergent evaluation in the cath lab, the EMS service keeps the patient connected to the twelve lead ECG during transport. The ECG is live fed to our institution. This is extremely helpful, as dynamic changes can be assessed continuously.
15 minutes after the decision to activate the cath lab and during transport to the PCI center ECG #3 was recorded.
ECG #3 (Repeat ECG, done 15 minutes after the initial ECG)
The ECG above shows more obvious OMI findings. This is perhaps not easily appreciated unless you are trained in recognizing subtle ischemic changes. There is increasing ST elevation in lead aVL with more pronounced ST depression inferiorly. There also is slight straightening of the ST segment and slight ST elevation in lead I compared with the first ECGs. These changes confirm ongoing OMI with certainty. The changes also illustrate well the value of serial ECGs or continuous ECG monitoring in high risk patients.
The QoH now recognizes the OMI with mid confidence.
In the cath lab the patient was found to have a 100% occlusion of a small 1st marginal branch of the LCx. The culprit lesion was opened and stented. Initial high sensitivity Troponin T was 810ng/L, later peaking at 2333ng/L.
Below is the post-PCI electrocardiogram.
The ST elevation in lead aVL has disappeared. The T wave inversion in aVL is more pronounced. There are large T waves in the inferior leads. In this context, patient pain free — post-PCI and with the previous ECGs in mind— the large inferior T waves represent reciprocal change from lateral reperfusion T waves and are not hyperacute T waves of ischemia.
The videos files below show the occlusion and the flow following wiring of the culprit artery.
Learning Points:
- Serial ECG are very valuable when it comes to identifying a dynamic process such as ACS.
- This patient’s OMI was identified early due to expert ECG interpretation. Eventually with more training the QoH will outperform any human in the detection of acute coronary occlusion.
- Incorporating the QoH interpretation into real time 12-lead ECG in high risk patients could greatly improve early diagnosis when it comes to OMI detection.
MY Comment, by KEN GRAUER, MD (12/16/2023):
- In addition to educational insights — Dr. Nossen's contributions periodically serve as a source for review of the Cabrera Format, recorded at 50 mm/second — as is the customary ECG recording format in his country.
- For those in search of brief review of the Cabrera Format for ECG recording — Please check out My Comment at the bottom of the page in the October 26, 2020 post in Dr. Smith's ECG Blog.
- As I periodically “confess” whenever I am presented with an ECG recorded at 50 mm/second — I routinely reduce the width of the ECG before me prior to beginning my interpretation. This is because my brain is “programmed” to interpreting 12-lead ECGs and rhythm strips at the 25 mm/sec. speed that is standard in the United States. After 4+ decades of interpreting tens of thousands of tracings — there is an instant (automatic) process of "pattern recognition" that immediately occurs in my brain, even before I initiate systematic assessment of any given tracing. This process is invalidated by the unfamiliar presence of different-sized complexes that result when a 50 mm/second recording speed is used.
- NOTE: Certain countries (such as Germany) frequently use a 50 mm/sec. recording speed, even when not using the Cabrera format. Usually it will be obvious on sight when a 50 mm/sec. speed is used — but sometimes it won’t be. This is especially true when assessing narrow QRS rhythms for heart rate (ie, a narrow QRS rhythm may appear widened and excessively slow if you fail to recognize a 50 mm/second recording speed). Therefore — it’s important to always be aware of the recording speed (and to BE SURE to clarify IF the tracing you are interpreting is from a foreign country — especially if the recording speed isn’t marked at the bottom of the ECG).
- In the upper left of Figure-1 (light BLUE border) — is the original ECG viewed by Dr. Nossen (ie, in Cabrera Format — recorded at 50 mm/sec. speed). As I indicate in my introduction above — I fully acknowledge my insecurity in interpreting a 12-lead ECG recorded at 50 mm/second speed — which is why I immediately reduced width of this tracing by 50% (upper right tracing in Figure-1 — with the RED border).
- Both of these upper tracings in Figure-1 are recorded in Cabrera format — which as per My Comment at the bottom of the page in the October 26, 2020 post — entails inversion of lead aVR (to negative aVR = -aVR) — with a more logical sequential display of frontal plane leads, beginning with lead aVL (at -30 degrees) — and extending by equally spaced 30 degree intervals until arriving at the most distant right-sided lead ( = lead III at +120 degrees).
- For readers preferring a format they are most familiar with — I converted today's initial ECG into the 12-lead orientation most commonly used in the U.S., including width reduction by 50% to expedite visual recognition (lower tracing in Figure-1 — with the GREEN border).
- Lead aVL is the "highest" of the high-lateral leads (corresponding to a -30 degree vantage point in the frontal plane — compared to a 0 degree location for lead I). As per Dr. Nossen — although slight, there is even if not elevation — an abnormal coving of the ST segment in lead aVL, that terminates in frank T wave inversion. Considering small amplitude of the R wave in this lead — the Q wave in aVL is abnormally wide.
- Support that the abnormal appearance of lead aVL is a "real" finding — is forthcoming from unmistakeable straightening (if not slight depression) of the ST segments in each of the inferior leads ( = leads II,III,aVF) — with that "magical" mirror-image opposite picture of the ST-T waves in lead aVL vs lead III that is so characteristic of either inferior OMI (if there is ST elevation in lead III) — or of high-lateral OMI (if there is ST elevation in aVL, as there is in today's case).
- (For more on this mirror-image opposite ST-T wave relation in leads III vs aVL — See My Comment in the March 8, 2019 and August 9, 2018 posts in Dr. Smith's ECG Blog).
- COMMENT: It is relatively uncommon for there to be ST elevation in only lead aVL — without there being at least some ST elevation in other lateral leads (ie, in leads I, V5 and/or V6). In addition — acute high-lateral OMI is most commonly accompanied by suggestion of posterior involvement — yet there is no ST depression in either lead V2 or V3. There is slight ST depression in lateral chest leads V4,V5,V6 — but I thought this to be nonspecific.
- BOTTOM Line: As per Dr. Nossen — ECG findings in today's initial tracing are subtle. That said — in this older man with risk factors and new CP, ST-T wave changes in leads aVL and in the inferior leads suffice to suggest acute OMI until proven otherwise. Isolation of ST elevation to only lead aVL is consistent with acute occlusion of a marginal branch in the LCx, which is precisely what was found on cardiac catheterization.
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