Remove EKG/ECG Remove Shock Remove Ultrasounds
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Another deadly triage ECG missed, and the waiting patient leaves before being seen. What is this nearly pathognomonic ECG?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Pain improved to 1/10 after EMS administers 324 mg aspirin and the following EKG is obtained at triage. If this EKG were handed to you to screen from triage without any clinical information, what would you think? Do you appreciate any dynamic changes compared to the patient’s prior EKG? What do you think? In fact, Kosuge et al.

EKG/ECG 137
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A woman in her 40s with acute chest pain and shortness of breath

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Here is her triage ECG: What do you think? There are 2 key points to making this diagnosis on the ECG: 1) There is T-wave inversion which you might think is due to Wellens' waves, but the patient has active symptoms, so it is not Wellens' sydrome 2) The T-wave inversion in V1-V4 is accompanied by T-wave inversion in lead III.

EKG/ECG 72
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Chest pain and shock: Is there a right ventricular OMI on this ECG? And should he undergo trancutaneous pacing?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

A 50-something man presented in shock with severe chest pain. His prehospital ECG was diagnostic of inferior posterior OMI. The patient was in clinical shock with a lactate of 8. Here is his ED ECG: There is bradycardia with a junctional escape. RVMI explains part of the shock. What is the atrial activity?

Shock 82
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Acute artery occlusion -- which one?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Her ECG is shown below: What do you think? The conventional machine algorithm interpreted this ECG as STEMI. Alternatively, with STE in V1 and III, and STD in I and aVL, this ECG could represent proximal RCA OMI with right ventricular involvement. What do you do clinically when the ECG looks like this?

EKG/ECG 110
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emDOCs Revamp: Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Obstruction

EMDocs

A 43-year-old male with a history of mitral valve regurgitation s/p valvular replacement, hypertension, hyperlipidemia was evaluated in the ED for septic shock secondary to a pyelonephritis with a renal abscess. This series provides evidence-based updates to previous posts so you can stay current with what you need to know.

Shock 86
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A man in his 30s with cardiac arrest and STE on the post-ROSC ECG

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Initial ROSC was obtained, during which this ECG was obtained: What do you think? I sent it to 2 of my ECG nerd colleagues with no clinical information whatsoever, who instantly said: "Looks like afib with subendocardial ischemia and right heart strain pattern." "I CPR was initiated immediately. The rhythm is atrial fibrillation.

EKG/ECG 52
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Grand Rounds Recap 1.3.24

Taming the SRU

R4 Case Follow-up: SCAD WITH dr. Martella Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection (SCAD) is a diagnosis confirmed via imaging: Coronary Angiography, Optical Coherence Tomography, Intravascular Ultrasound Therefore, treatment in the ED is the same as atherosclerotic ACS: ASA, heparin gtt and possible statin.

EKG/ECG 92