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Annals ECG of the Month: Acute Coronary Occlusion

By ACEP Now | on August 4, 2025 | 0 Comment
Annals of Emergency Medicine
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A 60-year-old woman with multivessel coronary artery disease status-post percutaneous coronary intervention with a drug-eluting stent to the left anterior descending and circumflex arteries 1-year prior presented to the emergency department with unrelenting chest pain intermittently relieved with sublingual nitroglycerin that started abruptly 3 days prior. She also had a history of ischemic heart failure with reduced ejection treated with furosemide 40 mg, metoprolol succinate 50 mg, and losartan 50 mg. A 12-lead ECG was obtained on presentation (Figure 1).

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ACEP Now: August 2025 (Digital)

Figure 1. Click to enlarge.

For the diagnosis, click here.

Note

This article was published in Annals of Emergency Medicine, 82, Triska J, George J, Rector G, et al., Acute coronary occlusion in a patient with prior known right bundle branch block: another chink in the armor for the ST-elevation myocardial infarction criteria, 219-221, © 2023 by the American College of Emergency Physicians.”

Topics: Acute Coronary SyndromeAnnals of Emergency MedicinecardiologyCase ReportsChest PainECGHeart FailurePercutaneous Coronary Interventionright bundle branch blockST-segment-elevation myocardial infarctionStent

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