Pericardium
EKG in Pericarditis
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EKG in Pericarditis
, Electrocardiogram in Pericarditis
See Also
Pericarditis
Pericarditis Causes
Pericardial Effusion
Medication Causes of Pericarditis
EKG in Acute Coronary Syndrome
EKG in Pulmonary Embolism
Indication
Suspected
Pericarditis
Efficacy
Test Sensitivity
Abnormal EKG changes in 90% of
Pericarditis
cases
All 4 EKG stages seen in <50% of
Pericarditis
cases
EKG changes are most common in
Viral Pericarditis
(due to inflammatory response)
EKG changes are frequently absent in
Uremic Pericarditis
Differential Diagnosis
Myocardial Infarction
Myocarditis
EKG with
Early Repolarization
Precautions
Exclude
Myocardial Infarction
on EKG prior to diagnosing
Pericarditis
Overdiagnosis and misdiagnosis of
Pericarditis
instead of true
STEMI
is the most significant pitfall
In true
Pericarditis
(when MI is excluded), EKG changes alone are NOT associated with a worse prognosis
Obtain serial EKGs
EKG in
Myocardial Infarction
evolves over minutes to hours
EKG in Pericarditis evolves over days
Approach
Step 1: Evaluate for
Myocardial Infarction
(any positive finding strongly favors MI)
ST depression (outside of V1 or aVR) or
ST Elevation
convex upwards (tombstone) or horizontal or
ST Elevation
in Lead III more than Lead II
Step 2: Evaluate for
Pericarditis
(if all 3 EKG criteria above are negative)
Significant down-sloping
PR Segment Depression
in multiple leads
Pericardial Friction Rub
ST Elevation
is concave upwards
No
ST Elevation
in V1 or aVR (but may have ST depression in these labs)
References
Amal Mattu, MD on EM:Rap TV (EMRAPTV_143_STEMIvsPericarditis)
Findings
Gene
ral
ST Segment
ST Elevation
(not ST depression)
Exclude
ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction
(
STEMI
)!
Pericardititis should not cause ST depression except in leads V1 and aVR
ST depression (outside V1, aVR) is
Myocardial Ischemia
or MI reciprocal change until proven otherwise
Concave upward ("Smiley face")
Similar to
Early Repolarization
Contrast with
Myocardial Infarction
ST Segment
is convex upward or horizontal on
EKG in Acute MI
Approach as
Myocardial Infarction
ST Segment
in
Myocardial Infarction
may be concave upward
Concave upward appearance does not completely exclude
Myocardial Infarction
ST Segment
changes are often diffuse (but may be focal)
Diffuse
ST Elevation
(and
PR Depression
) is typically seen only in
Viral Pericarditis
Contrast with focal changes on
EKG in Acute MI
ST Elevation
in lead II is typically greater than that in lead III in
Pericarditis
Suggests
Pericarditis
(but does not exclude
Myocardial Infarction
)
Contrast with
ST Elevation
in lead III greater than lead II which strongly suggests
Myocardial Infarction
ST Segment Elevation
to
T Wave
amplitude ratio (measure in lead V6)
Pericarditis
: >0.25
Early Repolarization
: <0.25
Absent Reciprocal
ST Segment
changes
PR Segment
PR Segment Depression
(down-sloping) present
More suggestive of
Pericarditis
if preceding downsloping TP segment
Variable finding (often transient)
Early and transient in
Viral Pericarditis
May also be seen in
Myocardial Infarction
PR Segment
elevation in aVR
May also be seen in
Myocardial Infarction
Typically absent in constrictive
Pericarditis
Findings typically absent in
Pericarditis
and suggestive alternative diagnosis (e.g.
Myocardial Infarction
)
Pathologic
Q Wave
s
Reciprocal
ST Segment
changes
Findings on EKG suggestive of large
Pericardial Effusion
(or
Cardiac Tamponade
)
Low Voltage (
R Wave
amplitude <5 mV in limb leads, <10 mV in precordial leads)
Electrical alternans
Findings
Stage 1
Pericarditis
Changes
Timing
Onset: Day 2-3
Duration: Up to 2 weeks
Findings
Diffuse concave upward
ST Segment Elevation
ST segment Depression
in leads aVR or V1
Concordant
T Wave
changes
PR Segment Depression
in leads II, AVF, and V4-V6
Findings
Stage 2
Pericarditis
Changes
Timing
Duration: Days to several weeks
Findings
ST Segment
returns to baseline
T Wave
flattens
Findings
Stage 3
Pericarditis
Changes
Timing
Onset: Week 2-3
Duration: Several weeks
Findings
ST Segment
returns to baseline
T Wave
inverts in leads II, AVF, and V4-V6
Findings
Stage 4
Pericarditis
Changes
Timing
Duration: Up to 3 months
Findings
Gradual resolution of
T Wave Inversion
References
Klasek and Alblaihed (2023) Crit Dec Emerg Med 37(6): 4-11
Imazio (2022) Heart 108(18): 1474-8 +PMID: 35523541 [PubMed]
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