PMID: 11904258Mar 21, 2002Paper

What's the point of ST elevation?

Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ
S D CarleyP Wallman

Abstract

The magnitude of ST elevation is a key piece of information in the decision to thrombolyse in acute myocardial infarction. The ability of clinicians to reliably identify ST elevation has not been previously assessed. This study sought to determine the variability in assessment of ST elevation in a group of doctors who commonly prescribe thrombolysis. The study was conducted in three large teaching hospitals in Manchester, England. A convenience sample of 63 SHOs and SpRs from emergency and general medicine were recruited. Each was shown three sample ECG complexes. They were asked to identify and quantify the degree of ST elevation. They then indicated the points on the ECG from which they measured ST elevation. ST elevation was not identified in 12% of cases. Doctors used a wide variety of points on the ST segment to assess elevation, this resulted in a wide variation in the observed magnitude of ST elevation. No guidance exists on where exactly ST elevation should be measured. This study shows a wide variation in practice. Protocol led thrombolysis decision pathways may be compromised by these findings.

References

Sep 2, 1993·The New England Journal of Medicine·UNKNOWN GUSTO investigators
Sep 28, 1999·Annals of Emergency Medicine·D TandbergS Meskin

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Citations

Aug 16, 2012·The Journal of Physiological Sciences : JPS·Isaac NaggarMark Stewart
Mar 15, 2006·Academic Emergency Medicine : Official Journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine·Stephen W Smith
Feb 19, 2008·Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·Ashley M CruseTeresa C DeFrancesco
Nov 19, 2003·European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing : Journal of the Working Group on Cardiovascular Nursing of the European Society of Cardiology·R Gamon, K Carolan
Mar 1, 2021·Journal of Electrocardiology·Emre K AslangerStephen W Smith

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