Acute Inferior Wall Myocardial Infarction: What Is The Culprit Artery?
Acute Inferior Wall Myocardial Infarction: What Is The Culprit Artery?
Acute Inferior Wall Myocardial Infarction: What Is The Culprit Artery?
ECG CHALLENGE
Correspondence to: Renguang Liu, MD, Cardiovascular Institute of the First Affiliated Hospital of Jinzhou Medical University, Renmin St, Jinzhou, 121000, Liaoning
Province, China. Email liurenguanglaoshi@126.com
For Sources of Funding and Disclosures, see page 1895.
© 2021 American Heart Association, Inc.
Circulation is available at www.ahajournals.org/journal/circ
Figure 2. An 18-lead ECG with correct limb leads placement recorded after admission.
There is ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, aVF, V7 through V9, V4R, and V5R, suggesting acute inferoposterior wall myocardial infarction with right
ventricular infarction.
tion; however, the precordial leads look more like a ure 4A. In a patient with a right arm–left arm lead
posterior wall than a lateral wall infarction. The limb reversal, the electrocardiographic changes are as fol-
and precordial discordance should raise the suspicion lows (Figure 4B): (1) The P-QRS-T waves are inverted
of the presence of electrode reversal. When limb leads in lead I, namely lead I should be flipped; and (2) the
recorded after admission were normal polarity, the pattern of lead aVR resembles a normal aVL, and
lead III elevations are greater than lead II, as shown lead II resembles a normal lead III. These electrocar-
in Figure 2. The 18-lead ECG confirms posterior wall diographic features in normal sinus rhythm are typi-
(V7–V9) with right ventricular (V4R and V5R) infarction cal and easy to diagnose. When it is complicated by
as well. The electrocardiographic manifestations are arrhythmia and depolarization or repolarization abnor-
consistent with a proximal right coronary artery (RCA) malities, electrocardiographic manifestations of right
occlusion.1,2 Such changes also confirm right arm–left arm–left arm lead reversal are atypical, and it is easy
arm lead reversal on admission ECG. Subsequent to cause a misdiagnosis. In this case of atrial fibrilla-