Two patients with chest pain and RBBB: do either have occlusion MI?
Dr. Smith's ECG Blog
OCTOBER 17, 2024
I would do bedside ultrasound to look at the RV, look for B lines as a cause of hypoxia (which would support OMI, and argue against PE), and if any doubt persists, a rapid CT pulmonary angiogram. As for the ECG, it could represent OMI, but RBBB is also a clue that it may be PE. There is sinus tachycardia at ~100/minute.
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