How often do you see an ECG that is just a little off? Maybe the T wave is flat, oddly-shaped or inverted. Maybe the ST segment is coved, very minimally-depressed or shows some J point elevation.
Identifying an acute myocardial infarction on the 12-lead ECG is the most important thing you can learn in ECG interpretation. Time is muscle when treating heart attacks. Missing a ST segment ...
ST depression, pathological Q-waves, left axis deviation and conduction delays and findings suggestive or diagnostic of primary electrical diseases such as long QT syndrome and Wolff-Parkinson-White ...
Fourteen studies and two case series were found describing ST-segment abnormalities and/or significant Q-waves in association with cocaine use. Not surprisingly, this literature overlaps ...
specifically an ECG with deep (>−0.2 mV) TWI and ST segment depression in the lateral or inferolateral leads. Anterior TWI beyond V2 in the absence of J-point elevation or with a coexistent depressed ...