This 50 year old male presented with some atypical chest pain and a blood pressure of 220/150.
Here is the previous ECG:
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| This is a previous ECG from months ago, showing that the presentation ECG is indeed New LBBB. Here there is profound LVH with secondary ST/T abnormalities. |
This did not alarm me. In ED patients with symptoms of ischemia and New LBBB, only about 2-4% have acute coronary occlusion (need for immediate reperfusion therapy). Many more have MI as diagnosed by biomarkers. This is typical evolution of severe LVH to LBBB in a patient with severe HTN. There may well be MI as diagnosed by biomarkers, but it is not due to acute coronary occlusion, rather most likely to demand ischemia from severe hypertension (afterload, “type II” MI).
Troponin I had a rise and fall, but never went above the 99% reference value for the VITROS assay (in ng/ml): 0.017, 0.018, 0.029, 0.020. So this also represents a case that had some tiny amount of myocardial necrosis but is by current definition not an MI.
