Cardiac Ischemia

The ability to identify cardiac ischemia, injury and infarction is vital in the management of the majority of cardiac emergencies. Most sudden cardiac deaths are associated with an ischemic episode. Patient deaths due to an acute myocardial infarction (MI) typically occur within the first 2 hours of symptoms. The 12 lead ECG is a superior diagnostic tool to quickly identify various degrees of ischemia.

“Time is muscle” should prompt an immediate 12 lead ECG for any patient suspected of having cardiac ischemia. Identifying regions of the heart that are ischemic, injured and/or infarcting requires a close inspection for Q waves, ST deviation, dynamic T wave changes and even R wave progression. Review ECG waveform indicators of cardiac ischemia and infarction.

In the search for signs of cardiac ischemia, identify both the abnormal waveforms as well as the region of the heart that is affected. For example, the presence of abnormal Q waves in leads II, III and aVF is sufficient evidence to confidently claim that the patient has had an inferior MI. Generally, abnormal findings must be present in two contiguous leads before arriving at a diagnosis. Note that a solitary abnormal Q wave is sufficient evidence of a previous MI of indeterminate age (in leads other than aVR).

Dynamic T wave inversions often result from ischemic zones. The appearance of ST depression is typical of cardiac ischemia, injury and possibly even infarction. The presence of ST elevation of 1 mm or more in two contiguous leads (lead views proximate to each other) is diagnostic of an acute myocardial infarction.

Upon discovery of ischemic indicators, identify the affected region of the heart (see Table 6.4). Visually progress through other leads that also monitor the affected region to support your findings i.e. from lead II to leads III and aVF. This is a simple process of putting all the evidence together to complete the clinical picture. A brief exercise would help make all this theory more applicable to your everyday practice.

Table 6.4 Lead Views and Locations of Myocardial Infarctions

Table 6.4 organizes ECG leads into specific monitored regions of the heart. Note that V2 and V4 are considered transitional leads because they straddle two regions. Reciprocal changes – mirror changes that reflect the opposite surface of the heart – are also included for reference.

1. Six Second ECG Guidebook (2012), T Barill, p. 144, 147

Our apologies for the recent ECG SIM outages. We've made some adjustments to our IT infrastructure. Please send us a note if it is not working.

Our new 12 Lead ECG SIM Deck is active!

We're planning a scheduled maintenance period.

Our website will be unavailable on Wed, Oct 16, 2024 starting at 8:00pm (PDT). We anticipate this will take about 1 hour.
Thank you for your understanding.

The SkillStat Team

×
  Six Second ECG Intensive Six Second ECG Mastery 12 Lead ECG & ACS 12 Lead Advanced
Prerequisite

None

None

Any Six Second ECG Course

12 Lead ECG & ACS

Time Frame

8 hours (1-day Course or 2 evenings)

20 hours 3-day Course

8 hours 1-day Course

8 hours 1-day Course

Tuition

$275

$675

$275

$275

Completion Card
Exam and Certification
SkillStat 2U-able
Reference materials included
Dynamic ECG rhythm interpretation
Static ECG rhythm interpretation
Clinical Impact Mapping
Acute Coronary Syndromes Overview
Acute Coronary Syndromes In-Depth
ST Segment & T Wave Differential
Identify Bundle Branch Blocks
15 | 18 Lead View Mapping
Electrical Axis
R Wave Progression
Left Bundle Branch Blocks with ACS
Atypical Findings
Acute Non-Ischemic Disease Conditions
Special Cases

•-included;     ○-reviewed
×