Title: EKG Rounds
1EKG Rounds
- Elizabeth Haney
- 19 October 2006
2Case
- 32 y.o. Caucasian male presents w/ 4 hours sharp
RSCP - Radiation to Lt shoulder and arm
- Worse with deep inspiration, no exertional change
- PMHx healthy, URTI Sx x 5/7
- Meds occasional tylenol
- NKDA
3Case (contd)
- Vitals HR 120 reg, RR 24, BP 124/82 bilat,
- T 37.1, O2 sat 99
- O/E sitting up in bed, moderate distress,
otherwise exam normal
4EKG
5Pericarditis
- Overview of the pericardium and pericarditis
- 4 EKG stages
- Differentiating between pericarditis and early
repolarization
6Pericardium
- Back to basics
- Pericardium fibroelastic sac, composed of
parietal and visceral layers with narrow
potential space between - Normally contains 15-60ml plasma ultrafiltrate.
- Drainage via thoracic duct and right lymphatic
duct into Rt pleural space
7Pericarditis
- Inflammation of pericardium
- Etiology Most cases idiopathic, with specific
etiology in only 22
8Pericarditis
- Classical features RSCP (varies w/ respiration,
sharp, worse w/ lying down, relieved w/ sitting
up, may radiate to trapezius), EKG abnormalities,
/- pericardial friction rub (25 of cases)
9EKG Findings
- Changes reflect superficial inflammation of the
epicardium - 90 will show STE, most commonly in leads
I,II,V5-6 (70 of patients) - PR depression in all leads except aVR (elevation)
may be 1st sign, reflecting repolarization
abnormality of atria - Changes follow typical 4 stage evolution over
weeks to months
Demangone,D., ECG Manifestations Noncoronary
Heart Disease., Emerg Med Clin N Am 24 (2006)
113-115
104 Stages of EKG changes
- Stage I Typically occurs during the first hours
days. Diffuse
concave-upward ST segment elevation with
concordance of T waves ST-segment depression in
aVR or V1 PR segment depression - Stage II Normalization of ST and PR segments T
wave flattening. Days weeks. - Stage III Symmetric T wave inversion. 3 weeks
-2 months - Stage IV Gradual resolution of T-wave inversion
(may remain inverted). May last 3 months
11What causes STE in the Emerg?
- LVH with Strain (25)
- Undefined STE (17)
- Acute MI (15)
- LBBB (15)
- Benign Early repolarization (12)
- RBBB (5)
- Non-specific BBB (5)
- LV aneurysm (3)
- Pericarditis (1)
- Retrospective review of 202 patients with chest
pain and STE gt1mm in limb leads, gt2mm precordial
leads, 2 or more contiguous leads
Brady WJ et al. Cause of ST Segment Abnormality
in ED Chest Pain Patients. Am J Emerg Med 2001
19 25-28.
12Benign Early Repolarization
- Normal EKG variant
- May be related to enhanced vagal tone
- Prevalent in patients with high (T5 or higher)
spinal cord injuries where sympathetic flow
interrupted - Males gt Females
- Predominantly age lt50
- Incidence 1-2
Rosens, Mehta, et al. Early Repolarization.
Clin.Cardiol. 1999 22, 59-65
13Early Repolarization
- Characterized by
- Diffuse ST segment elevation on EKG
- Upward concavity of the initial portion of the ST
segment - Notching of the terminal portion of the QRS
complex at the J point (jcn of QRS with ST) - Symmetrical, concordant T waves of large
amplitude - Relative temporal stability over time
- Maximal STE typically in precordial leads V2-V5
Rosens
14How can we distinguish between Early
Repolarization and Pericarditis?
15ST/T Ratio Tool
16ER vs. Pericarditis
Pericarditis Early
ST Concave up Concave up
STT in V6 gt0.25 lt0.25
ST elevation location limb and precordial leads precordial leads
PR depression present absent
Temporal change in EKG present absent
17Summary
- 4 stages of Pericaritis EKG changes
- Ddx of STE
- Early Repolarization
- Use of the ST/T wave ratio to help differentiate
pericarditis from early repolarization
18References
- www.uptodate.com
- Marx Rosens Emergency Medicine Concepts and
Clinical Practice, 6th ed., 2006 Ch. 81 1280-88 - Demangone,D., ECG Manifestations Noncoronary
Heart Disease., Emerg Med Clin N Am 24 (2006)
113-115 - Brady WJ et al. Cause of ST Segment Abnormality
in ED Chest Pain Patients. Am J Emerg Med 2001
19 25-28. - Mehta, et al. Early Repolarization. Clin.Cardiol.
1999 22, 59-65
19Pericarditis vs. AMI
Pericarditis MI
ST Concave Up Convex
Reciprocal Changes Absent Present
ST elevation Limb and precordial Specific coronary territory
Q waves Absent/no evolution Evolution
T wave inversion After ST segments return to baseline Before/as ST segments elevate
PR depression Present Absent unless atrial infarct