Written by Pendell Meyers
What do you think? |
See our other acute right heart strain / pulmonary embolism cases:
A man in his 50s with shortness of breath
A man in his 40s with RUQ abdominal pain
A woman in her 50s with shortness of breath
A crashing patient with an abnormal ECG that you must recognize
A man in his 40s with a highly specific ECG
Chest pain, ST Elevation, and tachycardia in a 40-something woman
Repost: Syncope, Shock, AV block, RBBB, Large RV, "Anterior" ST Elevation in V1-V3
A young woman with altered mental status and hypotension
A 30-something woman with chest pain and h/o pulmonary hypertension due to chronic pulmonary emboli
A 30-something with 8 hours of chest pain and an elevated troponin
Syncope, Shock, AV block, Large RV, "Anterior" ST Elevation....
Dyspnea, Chest pain, Tachypneic, Ill appearing: Bedside Cardiac Echo gives the Diagnosis
Chest pain, SOB, Precordial T-wave inversions, and positive troponin. What is the Diagnosis?
Cardiac Ultrasound may be a surprisingly easy way to help make the diagnosis
Answer: pulmonary embolism. Now another, with ultrasound....
This is a quiz. The ECG is nearly pathognomonic. Answer at bottom.
Chest Pain, SOB, anterior T-wave inversion, positive troponin
Anterior T wave inversion due to Pulmonary Embolism
Collapse, pulse present, ECG shows inferior OMI. Then there is loss of pulses with continued narrow complex on the monitor ("PEA arrest")
What do you suspect from this ECG in this 40-something with SOB and Chest pain?
MY Comment, by KEN GRAUER, MD (11/21/2024):
- At the end of Dr. Meyers' discussion — he lists more than 20 links to cases that we've presented related to this entity on Dr. Smith's ECG Blog. That said — the diagnosis of acute PE continues to be overlooked (and the ECGs of such patients continue to be misinterpreted as acute ischemia or infarction — instead of being recognized as diagnostic of acute PE).
- For example, in today's initial ECG (that I've reproduced and labeled in Figure-1) — there is no sinus tachycardia — and no right axis, RAA, incomplete or complete RBBB, tall R in lead V1, persistent precordial S waves, ST elevation in lead aVR or AFib.
- A suggestive History (shortness of breath with chest pain as the chief complaint).
- An S1Q3T3.
- Deep symmetric T wave inversion in the anterior chest leads (BLUE arrows in Figure-1) — that occurs in association with T wave inversion suggesting RV "strain" is present not only in the anterior chest leads, but also in inferior leads III and aVF.
- By itself — the S1Q3T3 sign seen in Figure-1 would not be specific for acute PE (ie, I have seen this sign in healthy individuals with no acute pulmonary pathology). However, in the presence of a suggestive history and the extensive T wave inversion seen in today's case — the S1Q3T3 strongly supports the diagnosis of acute PE.
- T wave inversion as diffuse as is seen in Figure-1 — most often suggests a sizeable PE (which makes it all the more surprising that there is no tachycardia and a lack of more of those ECG findings that are listed in Figure-2).
- Finally — the Q in lead III — the ST coving with slight ST elevation + T wave inversion in leads III and aVF — and the ST segment straightening in lead aVL — might lead one to misinterpret today's ECG as indicative of ACS. IF tempted to do so — it is worth rereading the above PEARL!
- CT angiogram confirmed the diagnosis of acute PE.
Figure-1: I've labeled the initial ECG in today's case. |
No comments:
Post a Comment
DEAR READER: I have loved receiving your comments, but I am no longer able to moderate them. Since the vast majority are SPAM, I need to moderate them all. Therefore, comments will rarely be published any more. So Sorry.