Title: ECG Rounds The Flippancy of T Waves
1ECG RoundsThe Flippancy of T Waves
- March 6, 2003
- Moritz Haager
- PGY-2
2One only needs to take a closer look to
appreciate that..
- "You need to tell your loved ones, the little
ones in particular, that when they hear the
President talking about al Qaeda, Iraq and other
places, I do so because I long for peace." - George W. Bush - Louisville, Kentucky, Sept. 5,
2002
3.perspective is everything
4Case 1
- 44 yo F c/o SOB.
- PMHx HTN.
- Vitals 118, 155/97, 34, 97 2 lpm
- Alert, oriented. Normal exam.
- Normal CXR
5Case 1
A PE w/ S1Q3T3 inverted T waves in inferior
and antero-lateral leads
6Case 2
- 59 yo F w/ chest pain x 4 hrs
- PMHx HTN
- Vitals normal
- Diaphoretic
- Pain free after given NTG.
7Case 2
A hyperacute Ts mild STE in V2-V4
8Case 2
A biphasic T waves in V1-V3 pathognomonic for
Wellens Syndrome
9Wellens Syndrome
- Specific ECG pattern highly specific for a
proximal LAD occlusion - Seen in 14-18 of pts with unstable angina
- Seen in pain-free state ECG changes may
normalize or evolve into STE during attack - Progress to extensive anterior MI if untreated
- Do NOT stress test these patients they all need
urgent angiography
10Diagnostic Criteria for Wellens Syndrome
- History of anginal pain
- Normal or minimally elevated cardiac enzymes
- Isoelectric or minimal (lt1mm) ST elevation
- No precordial Q waves
- Characteristic ECG pattern while PAIN-FREE
consisting of - Symmetrical deeply inverted T waves in V2 V3
occassionally in any of V1, V4, V5, V6 - Or
- Biphasic T wave in leads V2 and V3
Rhinehardt et al. Am J Emerg Med 2002 20 638-643
11Wellens T Wave Inversion Patterns
- A C show the more common (75) deep inversion
pattern - E F show the less common (25) biphasic
- pattern
Note depth symmetry of deflection acute
angle b/w baseline T wave nearing 90o
12Case 3
A deep T wave inversions in V2-V6 consistent
with Wellens Syndrome
13Case 4
A Biphasic T waves of Wellens Syndrome
14- "I want to send the signal to our enemy that you
have aroused a compassionate and decent and
mighty nation, and we're going to hunt you down.
George W. Bush - Kentucky, Sept. 5, 2002
15Case 5
- 47 yo M c/o chest pain
- Vitals 55, 112/72, 28, 98 R/A
- Diaphoretic
- Normal exam otherwise
16Case 5
A T wave inversion in V1-V4 consistent with
acute ischemia
17Acute Coronary TWI
- Symmetrical
- Narrow
- Small amplitude
18Wellens vs. Ischemia
- A B are examples of the two Wellens variants
- C D are examples of acute ischemic T wave
inversions not characteristic of Wellens. - Primary differentiating feature is depth of T
wave inversion
19Case 6
- 50 yo M c/o chest pain
- PMHx DM, HTN.
- Vitals 90, 105/65, 30, 97 RA
- Diaphoretic. Anxious. Exam otherwise normal.
- Ongoing pain despite NTG
20Case 6
A ischemic T wave inversions, in this case
secondary to NSTEMI
21Wellens vs. ACS
Ischemic T Wave
Wellens T Wave
22Case 7
- 61 yo F.
- Unresponsive. Last seen 6 hrs prior.
- PMHx HTN, DM
- 120, 110/60, 24, 98 RA
- GCS 9. No focal findings.
23Case 7
A diffuse T wave inversion due to CNS hemorrhage
24CNS ECG Manifestations
- Various intracranial events SAH most common
- Seen in 60 of SAH
- Dysfunction of autonomic control /- myocardial
damage - ECG features
- Diffuse deep T wave inversions
- Can be up to 15 mm deep
- Asymmetric w/ typical outward bulge in ascending
portion - Minor STE (lt3mm)
- Most pronounced in mid lateral precordial leads
- Prominent U waves (up or down)
- QT prolongation (by up to 60 of normal)
25CNS T Wave Inversions
- Deeply inverted
- Widely splayed
- Asymmetric
- ST elevation
26Case 8
- 64 yo M c/o chest pain x 2 hrs
- PMHx CHF
- Normal vitals
- Tender chest wall.
27Case 8
A scooped-out ST segments and T wave inversion
due to digoxin
28Digitalis Effect
- Flat or inverted
- T waves
- ST depression w/
- scooped-out
- appearance
- U waves
- Prolonged PR
- Prolonged QTc
29Case 9
- 34 yo male c/o chest pain
- No PMHx.
- Normal vitals.
- Pain free now
30Case 9
A T wave inversions due to persistent juvenile
T-wave pattern
31Differential for T Wave Inversion
- Myocardium
- Ischemia / infarction
- Ventricular strain
- Myocarditis
- PE
- Digitalis effect
- BBB
- Idiopathic global TWI
- CNS events
- SAH / ICH
- CVA
- Tumor
- Arrythmias
- Posttachycardia pattern
- WPW
- Ventricular pacing
- Ventricular ectopy
- Normal Variants
- Benign early repolarization
- Juvenile T-wave pattern
32FINAL EXAM
A A Wellens, B Ischemia, C NSTEMI, D PE, E BBB,
F LVH, G Dig effect, H persistent Juvenile T
waves, I SAH
33Summary
- Lots of things cause T wave inversion
- Diagnosis is guided by your history physical
- Probably the single most important diagnosis to
know is Wellens syndrome - Wellens indicates significant LAD stenosis and
mandates angiography
34- "We need an energy bill that encourages
consumption." - Trenton, N.J., Sept. 23, 2002
"We need an energy bill that encourages
consumption. - Trenton, N.J., Sept. 23, 2002