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- Nitin Thinda, John A Ambrose, Amarbir Bhullar, Siyi Huang, Miro Asadourian, Ashwini Sadhale, Rochelle Anne Chua, and Ralph Wessel.
- Division of Cardiovascular Medicine.
- Am. J. Med. 2022 Apr 1; 135 (4): 517-523.
BackgroundThe incidence of precordial T changes has been described in athletes and in specific populations, while the etiology in a large patient population admitted to the hospital has not previously been reported.MethodsAll electrocardiograms (ECGs) read by the same physician with new (compared to prior ECGs) or presumed new (no prior ECGs) precordial T wave inversions of >1 mm (0.1 mV) in multiple precordial leads were retrospectively reviewed and various ECG, patient-related, and imaging parameters assessed. A total of 226 patients and their ECGs were initially selected for analysis. Of these, 35 were eliminated leaving 191 for the final analysis.ResultsPatients and their ECGs were divided into 5 groups based on diagnosis and incidence including Wellens syndrome, takotsubo, type 2 myocardial infarction, other (including multiple diagnoses), and unknown. Although subtle differences including number of T inversion leads, depth of T waves, QTc intervals, and other variables were present between some groups, diagnosis in individual cases required appropriate clinical, laboratory, or imaging studies. For example, although Wellens syndrome was identified in <20% of cases, a presenting history of chest discomfort with precordial T changes either on the admission or next-day ECG was highly sensitive and specific for this diagnosis. In some cases, type 2 myocardial infarction can also have a Wellens-like ECG phenotype without significant left anterior descending disease.ConclusionsPrecordial T wave changes in hospitalized patients have various etiologies, and in individual cases, the changes on the ECG alone cannot easily distinguish the presumptive diagnosis and additional data are required.Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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