BP 156/94 HR 68 RR 14 O2 sat 100% on RA Temp 98.7
ECG from triage is shown…
Before reading on, try to come up with your own interpretation of this ECG before moving on to the final impression
- Rate: Ventricular rate 60 bpm
- Rhythm: sinus
- Axis: normal axis
- QRS: narrow
- ST/T Waves: biphasic t-waves in precordial leads, no Q waves, and good R wave progression
- Final ECG Interpretation: Biphasic t-waves in leads V2 – V6 (Concerning for proximal LAD critical stenosis = Wellens’ Syndrome)
This is a case of Wellens’ Syndrome. Wellens’ is a pre-infarction stage of coronary artery disease and has some specific criteria for its diagnosis:
- History of angina + t-wave inversion or biphasic t-waves in V2 – V4
- Normal or minimally elevated cardiac biomarkers
- No pathologic precordial q waves or loss of precordial r wave progression
There are 2 types of Wellens’ syndrome: Type 1 and Type 2:
Finally, history is important. Just because a patient has t-wave inversions or biphasic t-waves on an ECG in the anterior leads, does not mean the patient has Wellens’ syndrome. Below are some examples of other pathologies that could cause similar t-wave abnormalities in the anterior leads.
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