Electrocardiographic T-wave changes underlying acute cardiac and cerebral events
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.
North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY 11030, USA
Corresponding author. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY 11030, USA. Tel.: +1 516 562 0100; fax: +1 516 488 7059.