Saturday, 29 May 2010

66 year old male CC: Chest pain

Here's another great case submitted by Nick Ciaravella of Grady EMS in Atlanta, GA.

66 year old male presents to EMS with chest pain.

S - Chest Pain
A - None
M - Atenolol, HCTZ
P - HTN
L - meal, 7 hours prior to event
E - Mowing his lawn

O - Started while mowing his lawn
P - Provoked while exerting himself, Palliated initially when he sat down to rest
Q - Sharp
R - Substernal, initially radiating to his jaw, when he rested the pain was only in his chest
S - Initially 10/10, upon ems arrival 4/10, en route 8/10, 9/10, and 10/10 upon arrival at ED
T - No previous episodes

The patient initially presented to EMS with 4/10 pain and vitals as follows, 148/84, pulse 72, 18 respirations, SPO2 96%, Lung sounds clear and equal, BGL 103.

The patient was placed on 3 LPM O2 via NC, given 324 mg Aspirin PO, given 0.4 mg Nitro Tablet Sublingual and then 1 inch of Nitro Paste Transdermal. The Patients pain increased en route to the ED and began to radiate down his left arm en route.

12-lead ECG #1


12-lead ECG #2 (about 15 minutes later)


What do you think?

See also:

Anterior ischemia or posterior STEMI?

26 year old male CC: Chest pain

74 year old male CC: Chest pain

50 year old male CC: Respiratory distress, chest pain

48 year old male CC: Chest discomfort, shortness of breath

Pure (Isolated) Posterior STEMI -- not so rare, but often ignored! - Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

10 comments:

  1. Is a posterior MI a possiblity the changes in the second ecg being recpiricol

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  2. posterolateral MI

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  3. POSTLAT STEMI

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  4. Posterolateral STEMI

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  5. posterolateral stemi

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  6. Pericarditis?
    Although prolonged PR interval and ST depression in V3 - no R-wave in V2, so don't think it is a posterior MI

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  7. Hyperacute T-waves in V3-5, evolving to a posterolateral STEMI? A trip to the lab might be a good idea.

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  8. appears like a posterolateral STEMI - with reciprocal changes in aVL, V2, V3! a posterior lead ECG V6, V7 and V8 may help confirm this!

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  9. most likely posterolateral STEMI.. (reciprocal changes in V1-V4 and ST elevation in V5-V6)

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  10. Robert Martin8 June 2010 12:20

    Posterolateral/anterior MI c STEMI?
    Reciprocal changes in V1-V4, ST elevation V5-V6, first-degree block?

    That plus recurrant pain in spite of O2 + nitro seems to indicate an MI...did vitals change?

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