Articles Tagged With: ECG
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How Can This Patient Be Stable?
The ECG in the figure was obtained from a young adult who presented to the emergency department with palpitations, but who otherwise was hemodynamically stable. What is the diagnosis?
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This ECG Was in Your ‘Pile to be Read’
Imagine the ECG in the figure was one of many tracings you received to read from a group of patients seen by other providers in your clinic. Unfortunately, no clinical information about this patient was available. How would one interpret this tracing? Considering no clinical information regarding what happened to the patient was available, what is the next step?
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Analysis: Myocardial Infarction Most Commonly Missed Diagnosis
Researchers recommended additional training in reading ECGs and recognizing atypical presentations of myocardial infarction to reduce missed diagnoses.
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Is This Acute?
There is a stack of ECGs in need of interpretation. The tracing in the figure is among those tracings. No clinical information is available. How would one interpret this ECG? Are the changes acute?
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How Valuable is the Initial ECG Recorded in the ED?
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ECG Review: VT With No Heart Disease?
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ECG Review: V2 in the Mirror
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ECG Review: Pulmonary Artifact
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ECG Review: Chest Pain and Lots of P Waves
The 12-lead ECG shown in the figure was obtained from a 55-year-old woman with new-onset chest pain. Many more P waves than QRS complexes are seen on the tracing. How would you interpret this ECG? -
ECG Review: ST Elevation in Lead aVL
The 12-lead ECG shown in the Figure was obtained from a 50-year-old man with new-onset chest pain. In view of a negative prior history of coronary disease, what might cardiac catheterization show?