American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Volume 26, Issue 6 , Pages 716-720, July 2008

Electrocardiographic T-wave changes underlying acute cardiac and cerebral events

North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY 11030, USA

Received 22 October 2007; accepted 24 October 2007.

Abstract 

T-wave inversions produced by myocardial infarction (MI) are classically narrow and symmetric. Electrocardiography T-wave changes including low-amplitude and abnormally inverted T waves may be the result of noncardiac path physiology. We present a series of cases that presented with different electrocardiography T-wave changes. The first case involved a 64-year-old woman who presented to the emergency department with diffuse splayed T-wave inversions and was found to have an MI in the context of an acute cerebrovascular accident. We contrasted this case with that of a 76-year-old man with hypercholesterolemia who presented with T-wave widening and a prolonged QT interval and was found to have a subarachnoid hemorrhage secondary to a basilar aneurysm and no MI. Several mechanisms have been suggested to explain the cardiac and cerebral injury, including microvascular spasm and increased levels of circulating catecholamines. Accurate interpretation of T-wave changes can assist the clinician toward a timely therapeutic intervention and accurate diagnosis.

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PII: S0735-6757(07)00685-7

doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2007.10.017

American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Volume 26, Issue 6 , Pages 716-720, July 2008