scholarly journals Isolated T Wave Inversion in Lead aVL: An ECG Survey and a Case Report

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Getaw Worku Hassen ◽  
Ana Costea ◽  
Claire Carrazco ◽  
Tsion Frew ◽  
Anand Swaminathan ◽  
...  

Background.Computerized electrocardiogram (ECG) analysis has been of tremendous help for noncardiologists, but can we rely on it? The importance of ST depression and T wave inversions in lead aVL has not been emphasized and not well recognized across all specialties.Objective.This study’s goal was to analyze if there is a discrepancy of interpretation by physicians from different specialties and a computer-generated ECG reading in regard to a TWI in lead aVL.Methods.In this multidisciplinary prospective study, a single ECG with isolated TWI in lead aVL that was interpreted by the computer as normal was given to all participants to interpret in writing. The readings by all physicians were compared by level of education and by specialty to one another and to the computer interpretation.Results.A total of 191 physicians participated in the study. Of the 191 physicians 48 (25.1%) identified and 143 (74.9%) did not identify the isolated TWI in lead aVL.Conclusion.Our study demonstrated that 74.9% did not recognize the abnormality. New and subtle ECG findings should be emphasized in their training so as not to miss significant findings that could cause morbidity and mortality.

Perfusion ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-122
Author(s):  
Thach Nguyen ◽  
Hoang Do ◽  
Tri Pham ◽  
Loc T Vu ◽  
Marco Zuin ◽  
...  

Background: New onset of heart failure (HF) is an indication for the assessment of coronary artery disease. The aim of this study was to clarify the mechanistic causes of new onset HF associated with ischemic electrocardiograph (EKG) changes and chest pain in patients with patent or minimally diseased coronary arteries. Methods: Twenty consecutive patients (Group A) were retrospectively reviewed if they had an history of new onset of HF, chest pain, electrocardiographic changes indicating ischemia (ST depression or T wave inversion in at least two consecutive leads and a negative coronary angiogram [CA]) and did not require percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass grafting. A 1:1 matched cohort (Group B) was adopted to validate the results. Results: All patients had a negative CA. The majority of subjects in Group A had a higher left ventricular end diastolic pressure (LVEDP) when compared to the control group (p<0.05). Similarly, the aortic diastolic (AOD) pressure was lower in Group A than in Group B (p<0.05). In patients with elevated LVEDP and low AOD, with a coronary perfusion pressure (CPP) <20 mmHg, deep T wave inversion in two consecutive leads were more frequently observed. When the CPP was between 20-30 mmHg, a mild ST depression were more frequently recorded (p<0.05). Conversely, when the CPP was >30 mmHg, only mild non-specific ST-T changes or normal EKG were observed. Conclusions: In patients with HF and EKG changes suggestive of ischemia in at least two consecutive leads, a lower AOD could aggravate ischemia in patients with elevated left ventricular end diastolic pressure.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sari U. M. Vanninen ◽  
Kjell C. Nikus

Incorrect lead placement may result in unnecessary therapeutic interventions. We present a case report of 53-year-old man with new inferior T-wave inversions in the 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) noted during routine followup of hypertension without any cardiovascular symptoms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
pp. 178-181
Author(s):  
Demi Galindo ◽  
Emily Martin ◽  
Douglas Franzen

Introduction: Although rare, iatrogenic cases of pneumopericardium have been documented following laparoscopic surgery and mechanical ventilation. Electrocardiogram (ECG) changes, including ST-segment depressions and T-wave inversions, have been documented in cases of pneumopericardium, and can mimic more concerning causes of chest pain including myocardial ischemia or pulmonary embolism. Case Report: This unique case describes a patient who presented with chest pain and ST-segment changes on ECG hours after a laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair and who was found to have pneumopericardium. Conclusion: While iatrogenic pneumopericardium is often self-limiting and rarely requires intervention, it is critical to differentiate pneumopericardium from other etiologies of chest pain, including myocardial ischemia and pulmonary embolism, to prevent unnecessary intervention.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ehud Chorin ◽  
Matthew Dai ◽  
Edward Kogan ◽  
Lalit Wadhwani ◽  
Eric Shulman ◽  
...  

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in worldwide morbidity at unprecedented scale. Troponin elevation is a frequent laboratory finding in hospitalized patients with the disease, and may reflect direct vascular injury or non-specific supply-demand imbalance. In this work, we assessed the correlation between different ranges of Troponin elevation, Electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities, and mortality.Methods: We retrospectively studied 204 consecutive patients hospitalized at NYU Langone Health with COVID-19. Serial ECG tracings were evaluated in conjunction with laboratory data including Troponin. Mortality was analyzed in respect to the degree of Troponin elevation and the presence of ECG changes including ST elevation, ST depression or T wave inversion.Results: Mortality increased in parallel with increase in Troponin elevation groups and reached 60% when Troponin was &gt;1 ng/ml. In patients with mild Troponin rise (0.05–1.00 ng/ml) the presence of ECG abnormality and particularly T wave inversions resulted in significantly greater mortality.Conclusion: ECG repolarization abnormalities may represent a marker of clinical severity in patients with mild elevation in Troponin values. This finding can be used to enhance risk stratification in patients hospitalized with COVID-19.


EP Europace ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Sabbag ◽  
B Essayagh ◽  
C Antoine ◽  
G Benfari ◽  
J Malouf ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The majority of patients with of Mitral-valve-prolapse (MVP) have a excellent prognosis. Until recently most cases of mortality were thought to be related to mitral regurgitation and left ventricular dysfunction. The concept of the arrhythmic MVP emerged to describe cases of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the presence of isolated MVP yet it’s phonotype remains incompletely and inconsistently defined. Purpose To analyze the prevalence, severity and characteristics of ventricular-arrhythmia (VA), to determine it’s phenotypical context and independent impact on outcome in patients with MVP. Methods A cohort of 595 (65 ± 16 years, 278 female) consecutive patients with MVP and comprehensive clinical, arrhythmia (24hour-Holter) and Doppler-echocardiographic characterization, was identified and long-term outcome analyzed. Results VA was frequent, present in 43% of patients with at least ventricular ectopy≥5%, but was most often moderate (ventricular-tachycardia—VT 120-179bpm) in 27% and rarely severe (VT≥180/min) in 8.6%.  Presence of VA was associated with older age, male sex, bileaflet-prolapse, marked leaflet redundancy, mitral-annulus-disjunction (MAD), larger left-atrium and left ventricular end-systolic diameter, and T-wave-inversion/ST-depression (all P ≤ 0.001).  Severe VA was independently associated with presence of MAD, leaflet-redundancy and T-wave-inversion/ST-depression (all P &lt; 0.0001) but not with mitral regurgitation severity or ejection-fraction.  Outcome primary endpoint of overall survival after arrhythmia diagnosis (8-year 87 ± 2%) was strongly associated with arrhythmia-severity (8-year 90 ± 2% for no/trivial arrhythmia, 85 ± 3% for mild/moderate and 76 ± 7% for severe arrhythmia. P = 0.02, Figure). Excess-mortality was substantial for severe-arrhythmia (univariate-hazard-ratio 2.70[1.27-5.77], P = 0.01 vs. no/trivial arrhythmia), even adjusted comprehensively including for MVP-characteristics (adjusted-hazard-ratio 2.94[1.36-6.36], P = 0.006) ).  Conclusions This large cohort of isolated consecutive MVP characterized with 24-hour-Holter monitoring, clinical and Echocardiographic assessment, demonstrates that VA are frequent with MVP but rarely severe. The arrhythmic MVP was independently and strongly associated with specific ECG and morphologic patterns, particularly ST-T changes, MAD presence and marked leaflet redundancy, suggestive of a specific arrhythmic MVP phenotype, independently of MR-severity. Arrhythmia, particularly severe, is associated with long-term excess-mortality, independently of any other characteristics, including MR severity and LVEF. These findings lay the foundation for novel risk-stratification of MVP for the conduct of prospective controlled studies evaluating the management of MVP high-risk patients. Figure – Impact on survival of ventricular arrhythmia Overall survival of MVP stratified by ventricular arrhythmia (Panel A) or ventricular arrhythmia severity (Panel B) throughout follow-up. Abstract Figure.


Author(s):  
Anurodh Dadarwal ◽  
◽  
Sudeep Kumar ◽  

A young male was admitted with diagnosis of Covid-19 SARS infection and was having fever, cough & non-cardiac chest pain. There was no past history of cardiac symptoms and physical examination was unremarkable. His vitals were stable. His ECG showed ST elevation and Tall but notched T wave in V3 and ST depression in inferior and lateral leads. Carefully looking these manifestations, they seem the artifacts based on their ECG features and history of the patient. ECG was repeated removing all possible sources of technical errors for these ECG manifestations which showed normal ECG confirming the diagnosis of artifactual ECG. Patient was discharged uneventfully. Recognition of ECG artifact and their technical causes is necessary to avoid inappropriate management.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Layal Mansour MD ◽  
Elie Chammas MD, FESC, FACC ◽  
Fida Charif MD ◽  
Mohamad Jihad Mansour

<p><em>A 48-year-old male was admitted to the emergency department because of intermittent chest pain of 2 days duration. At the time of examination, he was pain-free. An electrocardiogram (ECG) showed biphasic T waves in leads V2 to V6. Troponin-I level was negative. During his transfer to the cardiac catheterization laboratory, he had a short episode of chest pain. His ECG was normal. Despite the unusual extension of biphasic T waves to the lateral precordial leads, the condition was recognized as Wellens’ syndrome, which typically associates biphasic or deep symmetric T wave inversion in leads V2 and V3 during pain-free periods with a critical stenosis in the proximal left anterior descending artery. The syndrome is uncommon to medical practice but should be recognized immediately in the emergency department because it represents a pre-infarction stage and carries a high risk of mortality. </em><em></em></p>


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