Affiliation:
1. The Ohio State University Heart and Vascular Center, Columbus, OH
2. Division of Cardiology, University of Perugia School of Medicine, Perugia, Italy
3. Division of Biostatistics, The Ohio State University College of Public Health, Columbus, OH
Abstract
Background
T‐wave abnormalities are common during the acute phase of non‐
ST
‐segment elevation acute coronary syndromes, but mechanisms underlying their occurrence are unclear. We hypothesized that T‐wave abnormalities in the presentation of non‐
ST
‐segment elevation acute coronary syndromes correspond to the presence of myocardial edema.
Methods and Results
Secondary analysis of a previously enrolled prospective cohort of patients presenting with non‐
ST
‐segment elevation acute coronary syndromes was conducted. Twelve‐lead electrocardiography (
ECG
) and cardiac magnetic resonance with T2‐weighted imaging were acquired before invasive coronary angiography.
ECG
s were classified dichotomously (ie, ischemic versus normal/nonischemic) and nominally according to patterns of presentation: no
ST
‐ or T‐wave abnormalities, isolated T‐wave abnormality, isolated
ST
depression,
ST
depression+T‐wave abnormality. Myocardial edema was determined by expert review of T2‐weighted images. Of 86 subjects (65% male, 59.4 years), 36 showed normal/nonischemic
ECG
, 25 isolated T‐wave abnormalities, 11 isolated
ST
depression, and 14
ST
depression+T‐wave abnormality. Of 30 edema‐negative subjects, 24 (80%) had normal/nonischemic
ECG
s. Isolated T‐wave abnormality was significantly more prevalent in edema‐positive versus edema‐negative subjects (41.1% versus 6.7%,
P
=0.001). By multivariate analysis, an ischemic
ECG
showed a strong association with myocardial edema (odds ratio 12.23, 95% confidence interval 3.65‐40.94,
P
<0.0001). Among individual
ECG
profiles, isolated T‐wave abnormality was the single strongest predictor of myocardial edema (odds ratio 23.84, 95% confidence interval 4.30‐132,
P
<0.0001). Isolated T‐wave abnormality was highly specific (93%) but insensitive (43%) for detecting myocardial edema.
Conclusions
T‐wave abnormalities in the setting of non‐
ST
‐segment elevation acute coronary syndromes are related to the presence of myocardial edema. High specificity of this
ECG
alteration identifies a change in ischemic myocardium associated with worse outcomes that is potentially reversible.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献