Electrocardiographic identification of the culprit coronary artery in acute non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction: predictive value of N-wave and T-wave precordial instability.

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Electrocardiographic identification of the culprit coronary artery in acute non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction: predictive value of N-wave and T-wave precordial instability.

Coron Artery Dis. 2020 Jun 19;:

Authors: Rostoff P, Wisniewski P, Gajos G, Konduracka E, Nessler J, Kruszelnicka O

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recently, novel ischemic electrocardiographic changes have been described, which may be clinically significant in the identification of the culprit coronary vessel in patients with non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI). We sought to determine the predictive value of N-wave, T-wave precordial instability, de-Winter ST/T-wave complex, and inferolateral myocardial infarction in the identification of the culprit artery in patients with NSTEMI referred for early invasive (<24 h) treatment.
METHODS: A total of 148 patients with NSTEMI, aged 40-91 years, were enrolled from a cohort of 510 consecutive NSTEMI subjects, hospitalized in our center in 2015-2017.
RESULTS: Of the evaluated ischemic ECG changes, the most common finding in patients with culprit left circumflex (LCx)/obtuse marginal artery or right coronary artery was T-wave precordial instability (28.3 and 13.5%, respectively), whereas in individuals with culprit left anterior descending/diagonal artery, T-wave precordial instability and N-wave in leads II, III or aVF occurred equally often (16.0%). A significant relationship was found between the occurrence of N-wave in inferolateral leads and culprit LCx/obtuse marginal. In multivariable analysis, N-wave in lead aVL [odds ratio (OR) 2.10; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.15-3.81], and T-wave precordial instability (OR 1.56; 95% CI, 1.02-2.41) were independent predictors of culprit LCx/obtuse marginal. The accuracy of N-wave in lead aVL in predicting the culprit LCx/obtuse marginal was 73.9% and was higher than the accuracy of T-wave precordial instability, which was 69.1%.
CONCLUSIONS: In patients with NSTEMI referred for early invasive treatment, the presence of N-wave or T-wave precordial instability may be of greater clinical importance in the prediction of culprit LCx/obtuse marginal than classic ischemic changes.

PMID: 32568742 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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