15 Bilder zum Thema "st segment elevation" bei ClipDealer

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During the onset of variant angina pectoris, ECG is divided into non fusion wave, partial fusion wave and complete fusion wave according to the fusion degree of QRS wave, ST segment and T wave.
At present, there is a younger trend in patients with acute myocardial infarction, so it is important to check the ECG for acute chest pain in young people.
A 36 year old man survived CPR after sudden syncope. The electrocardiogram was suggestive of Brugada syndrome type 1. Implantation of ICD therapy.
Male, 84 years old, admitted to hospital with chest pain for 1 day. ECG showed acute inferior and posterior MI and possibly right MI. The patient died of ventricular fibrillation the next day.
When acute left main artery occlusion causes ST segment elevation myocardial infarction, it is often accompanied by extensive anterior and high lateral myocardial infarction.
Male, 84 years old, admitted to hospital with chest pain for 1 day. These ECG rhythms are the Holter monitor records of the patients after admission, and they are third degree atrioventricular block.
Firstly, select point J as the reference point, and then select 60ms after point J as the measurement point to evaluate the ST segment offset morphology and amplitude.
In acute high lateral myocardial infarction, there is indicative ST segment elevation in leads I and aVL, and corresponding ST segment depression in leads II, III and aVF.
Ventricular fibrillation is a fatal arrhythmia and also a cardiac arrest rhythm. It can be divided into coarse fibrillation and fine fibrillation according to the amplitude of the fibrillation wave.
In case of acute anterior myocardial infarction, the characteristics of ST segment elevation in ECG can be used to deduce whether the culprit vessel system is the left main trunk or the proximal LAD.
When acute left main artery occlusion causes ST segment elevation myocardial infarction, it is often accompanied by extensive anterior and high lateral myocardial infarction.
Male, 60 years old, clinically diagnosed as acute extensive anterior wall myocardial infarction. The patient died of ventricular fibrillation after admission.
Coronary artery spasm causes transmural myocardial ischemia, and ST segment elevation in ECG has localization characteristics. Criminal vessels can be derived from ST segment elevation leads in ECG.
The reentry of bundle branch reentrant ventricular tachycardia occurs between the left bundle branch and the right bundle branch. This is a malignant ventricular tachycardia.

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