
There is sinus tachycardia with ST elevation in II, III, and aVF, as well as V4-V6. There is reciprocal ST depression in I and aVL. At first glance, it seems the patient is having a STEMI.
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But, remember, we do not evaluate and treat ECGs, we evaluate and treat patients. Even if this ECG is the first thing one sees (as it was for me), one should stop and think: "This is an unusual STEMI." Why?
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ACS and STEMI do not cause tachycardia unless there is cardiogenic shock. Are the lungs clear? Is the patient cool and pale? Then ACS (STEMI) might be primary; this might be cardiogenic shock.
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More often, tachycardia with ST segment abnormalities (elevation or depression) is due to an underlying illness (PE, sepsis, hemorrhage, dehydration, hypoxia, respiratory failure, etc.). One must clearly rule out these processes before jumping on the ACS diagnosis.
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Furthermore, notice the well-formed Q-waves in inferior leads. These must raise suspicion of old MI with persistent ST elevation.
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One very useful adjunct is ultrasound: bedside ED echo of his heart revealed no wall motion abnormality and hyperdynamic function. Large volume fluid resuscitation was undertaken. The K returned at 6.9 mEq/L. The HCO3 was 8. Cr was 13.4. Even after 3 liters of fluid, his CVP was very low.
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Troponins peaked at 0.275 ng/ml. An angiogram showed no acute coronary lesions. The patient was suffering from severe dehydration, possibly with sepsis.
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After stabilization, old EKGs and an old echocardiogram were found, demonstrating old inferior MI with persistent ST elevation (LV aneurysm morphology).








