Wellens' syndrome is a life-threatening ECG pattern characterized by biphasic (Type A, 25% of cases) or deeply inverted (Type B, 75% of cases) T waves in leads V2-V3, indicating critical proximal left anterior descending artery stenosis; it is a pre-infarction syndrome where patients appear stable with resolved chest pain and normal cardiac enzymes, but can progress to devastating anterior wall myocardial infarction within days to weeks, requiring urgent cardiology evaluation and coronary angiography rather than stress testing, which may precipitate complete occlusion and death.
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Wellens' Syndrome || # aetcm || #emergencymedicine ||追加:
Welcome to ADC, the emergency medicine channel.
In this video, we are going to discuss one of the most and important potentially life-saving ECG patterns in emergency medicine, Wellens syndrome.
This is an ECG finding that every healthcare professional must recognize because the patient may look stable, may be pain-free, and may even have normal cardiac enzymes. Yet, we are only hours or days away from a devastating anterior wall myocardial infarction.
So, let's begin. Imagine a patient arrives in the emergency department with a history of severe chest pain.
By the time you see the patient, the pain has completely resolved. Vital signs are stable, troponin levels are normal or only minimally elevated.
The patient appears comfortable. Many clinicians may feel reassured. But then, you look at the ECG.
And the ECG, it is warning you about a critical stenosis of the proximal left anterior descending artery or LAD, often called the widowmaker artery.
This warning sign is known as Wellens syndrome.
Wellens syndrome is characterized by the characteristic T wave abnormalities in the anterior chest leads, especially V2 and V3, in a patient with a recent history of anginal chest pain that has now resolved.
There are two classic ECG patterns. Type A Wellens pattern shows biphasic T waves in leads V2 and V3. The T wave initially goes upward and downward. This pattern accounts for approximately 25% of cases.
The second and more common pattern is type B Wellens pattern. Here, the T waves are deeply and symmetrically inverted in the anterior leads. This accounts for 75% of the cases.
Also, note that the T wave changes can evolve over the time from type A to type B pattern.
Now comes the most important concept.
The ECG pattern is usually seen when the patient is pain free.
During active chest pain, these T T wave changes may disappear and appear deceptively normal.
This phenomenon is called pseudo normalization.
In reality, pseudo normalization often indicates reocclusion of the LAD artery and worsening ischemia.
So, remember a normal looking ECG during recurrent chest pain does not always mean improvement. Sometimes, it means the artery has occluded again.
So, why does this happen?
The current understanding is that the LAD artery becomes temporarily occluded producing myocardial ischemia.
Spontaneous reperfusion then occurs either naturally or after medication such as aspirin.
As blood flow as blood flow returns, the chest pain improves and the characteristic Wellens T wave pattern appears on the ECG.
However, the artery remains critically narrowed and can close again at any moment.
That is why Wellens syndrome is often described as a pre-infarction syndrome.
Without definitive treatment, many patients progress to a large large anterior wall myocardial infarction within days to weeks. So, what are the diagnostic clues?
A recent history of chest pain, the patient currently being pain free, biphasic or deeply inverted T waves in to V3, minimal or no ST segment elevation, no pathological Q waves, preserved R wave progression, and normal or only slightly elevated cardiac biomarkers.
Now, for the most important management here, never stress test a patient with suspected Wellens syndrome.
Exercise stress testing may be may precipitate complete LAD occlusion resulting in myocardial infarction, ventricular arrhythmias, cardiac arrest, or death.
Instead, these patients require urgent cardiology evaluation and early coronary angiography with revascularization whenever indicated.
So, never ignore biphasic or deeply inverted T waves in V2 and V3 in a patient with recent chest pain. So, recognize it and act on it because identifying Wellens syndrome today may prevent a catastrophic myocardial infarction tomorrow.
Thank you for watching.
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