Immediate diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction by two-dimensional echocardiography.
- 1 February 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 65 (2) , 323-329
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.65.2.323
Abstract
To define the role of portable two-dimensional echocardiography (2-D echo) in the immediate diagnosis of acute chest pain syndrome, 80 consecutive patients were studied. Adequate 2-D echo studies were obtained in 65 (81%). Thirty-three patients had clinical evidence of transmural or nontransmural acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 18 of whom had nondiagnostic initial ECGs. Thirty-two did not have a clinical AMI. Thirty-one of the 33 (94%) patients with clinical AMI had regional wall motion abnormalities on the initial 2-D echo; the other two had uncomplicated nontransmural AMIs, diagnosed only by ECG in one and by ECG and moderate elevation of CK-MB isoenzyme in the other. Twenty-seven of the 32 patients without clinical AMI had normal regional wall motion on the initial 2-D echo and none had a complication (severe arrhythmia, recurrent pain, heart failure or death) during the hospital course. Conversely, 10 of the 36 patients with initial 2-D echo regional wall motion abnormalities had a complication (p less than 0.05). Thus, in patients with acute chest pain syndrome, an initial 2-D echo that shows no regional wall motion abnormality suggests that such patients will not develop an AMI or clinical complication during the hospital course. An initial 2-D echo with regional wall motion abnormality identifies a high-risk group of patients who are likely to have AMI and important cardiac complications and may, therefore, benefit from admission to an intensive care unit.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Exercise cross-sectional echocardiographic diagnosis of coronary artery diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1981
- Do Patients in Whom Myocardial Infarction Has Been Ruled out Have a Better Prognosis after Hospitalization Than Those Surviving Infarction?New England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Diagnosis of coronary artery disease with exercise radionuclide imaging: State of the artThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1980
- Intensive-Care Units: Who Needs Them?New England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- The Course of Patients with Suspected Myocardial InfarctionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Medical Intensive Care: Indications, Interventions, and OutcomesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Value and limitations of technetium-99m stannous pyrophosphate in the detection of acute myocardial infarctionAmerican Heart Journal, 1979
- Diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction in the emergency roomJournal of Community Health, 1979
- Specificity of elevated serum MB creatine phosphokinase activity in the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarctionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1975
- Echocardiography in acute myocardial infarctionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1975