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The site of LAD occlusion (proximal versus distal) predicts both infarct size and prognosis.
Proximal LAD / LMCA occlusion has a significantly worse prognosis due to larger infarct territory size and more severe haemodynamic disturbance
The site of occlusion can be inferred from the pattern of ST changes in leads corresponding to the two most proximal branches of the LAD: the first septal branch (S1) and the first diagonal branch (D1).
Territories
S1 supplies the basal part of the interventricular septum, including the bundle branches (corresponding to leads aVR and V1)
D1 supplies the high lateral region of the heart (leads I and aVL)
Occlusion proximal to S1
Signs of basal septal involvement:
ST elevation in aVR
ST elevation in V1 > 2.5 mm
Complete RBBB
ST depression in V5
Occlusion proximal to D1
Signs of high lateral involvement:
ST elevation / Q-wave formation in aVL and I
ST depression ≥ 1 mm in II, III or aVF (reciprocal to STE in aVL)
In the context of anterior STEMI, ST elevation in aVR of any magnitude is 43% sensitive and 95% specific for LAD occlusion proximal to S1. Right bundle branch block in anterior MI is an independent marker of poor prognosis; this is due to the extensive myocardial damage involved rather than the conduction disorder itself.
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First reported by Dutch Professor of Cardiology,Robbert J. de Winterin 2008, the de Winter ECG pattern is ananterior STEMI equivalentthat presents without obvious ST segment elevation. These patients are sufferingocclusion myocardial infarction (OMI)and require immediate reperfusion therapy.
ECG Diagnostic Criteria
Tall, prominent, symmetrical T waves in the precordial leads
Upsloping ST segment depression > 1mm at the J point in the precordial leads
Absence of ST elevation in the precordial leads
Reciprocal ST segment elevation (0.5mm – 1mm) in aVR
Typical STEMI morphology may precede or follow the De Winter pattern
Original reports of the de Winter pattern suggested that the ECG did not change or evolve until the culprit artery had been opened. Since then, cases have been reported where the de Winter pattern evolved from, or evolved to, a “classic” anterior STEMI.
Clinical Significance of de Winter T Waves
The de Winter pattern is seen in ~2% of acute LAD occlusions and is often under-recognised by clinicians
Key diagnostic features include ST depression and peaked T waves in the precordial leads
Unfamiliarity with this high-risk ECG pattern may lead to delays in appropriate treatment (e.g. failure of cath lab activation), with attendant negative effects on morbidity and mortality
Background
1947 – The de Winter ECG pattern was first reported by William Dressler (1890-1969) in a study including “Twenty-seven instances of myocardial infarction were studied, in which the first electrocardiogram was taken as early as one and one-quarter hours, and not later than twelve hours, after the onset of symptoms.”
In five cases (18%), high T waves were not associated with abnormal elevation of S-T, nor with significant changes in QRS. Thus, they represented the leading diagnostic sign in the early stage of myocardial infarction.
2008 – The de Winter ECG pattern was first reported in a case series by de Winter RJ, Verouden NJ, Wellens HJ et al. They observed this ECG pattern in 30 / 1532 patients with acute LAD occlusions (2% of cases)
2009 – Verounden and colleagues replicated this finding in a further case series. They found a de Winter ECG pattern in 35 / 1890 patients requiring PCI to the LAD (2% of cases). Patients with the de Winter ECG pattern were younger, more likely to be male and with a higher incidence of hypercholesterolaemia compared to patients with a classic STEMI pattern
In patients presenting with chest pain, ST-segment depression at the J-point with upsloping ST-segments and tall, symmetrical T-waves in the precordial leads of the 12-lead ECG signifies proximal LAD artery occlusion. It is important for cardiologists and emergency care physicians to recognise this distinct ECG pattern, so they can triage such patients for immediate reperfusion therapy
The de Winter ECG pattern is now considered a “STEMI-equivalent” and an indication for immediate reperfusion therapy in many acute coronary syndrome guidelines
Example ECGs
Example 1
De Winter T waves
Upsloping ST depression in the precordial leads (> 1mm at J point)
Peaked anterior T waves (V2-6), with the ascending limb of the T wave commencing below the isoelectric baseline
Subtle ST elevation in aVR > 0.5mm
There is also some high lateral involvement, with subtle ST elevation in aVL plus reciprocal change in III + aVF. This is consistent with LAD occlusion occurring proximal to the first diagonal branch.
Example 2
De Winter T waves
Upsloping ST depression in the precordial leads (> 1mm at J point)
Peaked anterior T waves (V2-6), with the ascending limb of the T wave commencing below the isoelectric baseline
Subtle ST elevation in aVR > 0.5mm
Example 3
De Winter T waves
Upsloping ST depression (> 1mm at J point) in the precordial leads V2-6, plus leads I and II
Peaked anterior T waves, with the ascending limb of the T wave commencing below the isoelectric baseline
This great ECG demonstrates de Winter’s T waves combined with features of anterior STEMI — the patient ultimately turned out to have an acute proximal LAD occlusion.
Upsloping ST depression and peaked T waves (De Winter’s T waves) in V3-6.
ST elevation in the septal (V1-2) and high lateral leads (I & aVL) with inferior reciprocal change, consistent with an LAD occlusion proximal to the first diagonal branch.
Thanks to Jennifer Davidson for contributing this ECG.
Wellens Syndrome is a clinical syndrome characterised by biphasic or deeply inverted T waves in V2-3, plus a history of recent chest pain now resolved. It is highly specific for critical stenosis of the left anterior descending artery (LAD)
The pattern is usually present in the pain free state — it may be obscured during episodes of ischaemic chest pain, when there is “pseudonormalisation” of T waves in V2-3
Wellens syndrome is a key example of why all patients presenting with chest pain must have serial ECGs
Clinical significance
Patients may be pain free by the time the ECG is taken, and have normal or minimally elevated cardiac enzymes. However, they are at extremely high risk for extensive anterior wall MI within the subsequent days to weeks
Due to the critical LAD stenosis, these patients usually require invasive therapy, do poorly with medical management, and may suffer MI or cardiac arrest if inappropriately stress tested
Deeply inverted or biphasic T waves in V2-3 (may extend to V1-6)
ECG pattern present in pain-free state
Isoelectric or minimally-elevated ST segment (< 1mm)
No precordial Q waves
Preserved precordial R wave progression
Recent history of angina
Normal or slightly elevated serum cardiac markers
There are two patterns of T-wave abnormality in Wellens syndrome:
Type A – Biphasic, with initial positivity and terminal negativity (25% of cases)
Type B – Deeply and symmetrically inverted (75% of cases)
Biphasic T Waves (Type A)
Deeply Inverted T Waves (Type B)
Wellens T wave evolution
T wave changes can evolve over time from Type A to Type B pattern (Smith et al).
Understanding T wave changes
The following sequence of events is thought to occur in patients with Wellens syndrome:
A sudden complete occlusion of the LAD causes a transient anterior STEMI, causing chest pain & diaphoresis. This stage may not be successfully captured on an ECG recording
Re-perfusion of the LAD (e.g. due to spontaneous clot lysis or prehospital aspirin) leads to resolution of chest pain. ST elevation improves and T waves become biphasic or inverted. The T wave morphology is identical to patients who reperfuse after a successful PCI
If the artery remains open, the T waves evolve over time from biphasic to deeply inverted
The coronary perfusion is unstable, however, and the LAD can re-occlude at any time. If this happens, the first sign on the ECG is an apparent normalisation of the T waves — so-called “pseudo-normalisation”. The T waves switch from biphasic/inverted to upright and prominent. This is a sign of hyperacute STEMI and is usually accompanied by recurrence of chest pain, although the ECG changes can precede the symptoms
If the artery remains occluded, the patient now develops an evolving anterior STEMI
Alternatively, a “stuttering” pattern may develop, with intermittent reperfusion and re-occlusion. This would manifest as alternating ECGs demonstrating Wellens and pseudonormalisation/STEMI patterns
This sequence of events is not limited to the anterior leads — similar changes may be seen in the inferior or lateral leads, e.g. with RCA or circumflex occlusion.
Also, the inciting event does not necessarily have to be thrombus formation — Wellens syndrome may also occur in normal coronary arteries following an episode of vasospasm, as in this case of cocaine-induced vasospasm. However, it is safer to assume the worst (i.e. critical LAD stenosis) and work the patient up for an angiogram.
The concept of occlusion/reperfusion/re-occlusion is explained by Dr Stephen Smith. Also check out Example 5, below.
History of Wellens Syndrome
1979 – Gerson et al first described the occurrence of exercise-induced U wave inversion (inverted terminal T-waves) in the precordial leads in patients with proximal left anterior descending artery (LAD) ischemia. 33/36 patients (92%) with this abnormality had >75% stenosis in the proximal LAD.
1980 – Gerson further evaluated ‘U-wave inversion‘, this time at rest, and found 24/27 (89%) of patients with the ECG findings had evidence of LAD or left main ischemia.
1982 – De Zwaan, Wellens et al reported a similar ECG abnormality without mentioning inverted U-waves. They observed that patients admitted for unstable angina with this ECG finding were at high risk for myocardial infarction.
Semantic nomenclature
There is confusion in the literature regarding the naming of the T wave patterns, with some authors using Type 1 (Type A) for biphasic T waves and Type 2 (Type B) for inverted. It may be better to just describe the T wave pattern!
Original description**
ECG patterns in precordial leads of the patients reported. Pattern A was found in four patients; pattern B, in 22 patients
Example ECGs
Example 1
Wellens Syndrome (Type A Pattern)
Biphasic precordial T waves with terminal negativity, most prominent in V2-3
Minor precordial ST elevation
Preserved R wave progression (R wave in V3 > 3mm)
Example 2
Wellens Syndrome (Type A Pattern)
The biphasic T waves in V2-3 are characteristic of Wellens syndrome
Example 3
Wellens Syndrome (Type B Pattern)
There are deep, symmetrical T wave inversions throughout the anterolateral leads (V1-6, I, aVL)
Example 4
Wellens Syndrome (Type A Pattern)
Biphasic T waves with minimal ST elevation in V1-5, consistent with Wellens syndrome
The patient had experienced ischaemic chest pain immediately prior to arrival in hospital and was pain free at the time the ECG was taken
The prehospital ECG from ~15 minutes earlier demonstrates a clear anterolateral STEMI:
This prehospital ECG was taken while the patient was still symptomatic with chest pain and diaphoresis
It shows unmistakable features of anterolateral STEMI, with marked precordial ST elevations and inferior reciprocal change
The symptom resolution and conversion to a Wellens ECG on arrival to hospital indicates reperfusion of the LAD
Example 5
This fantastic ECG series (submitted by paramedic Andrew Bishop) shows a stuttering pattern of LAD occlusion, reperfusion and re-occlusion in a middle aged lady with chest pain.
The ECGs are presented in chronological order, over a 45 minute period from the prehospital environment to the cath lab:
(a) Patient experiencing chest pain and diaphoresis
The ECG now shows a typical Wellens pattern of biphasic T waves in V2-3, plus improvement in the anterolateral ST elevation
This indicates spontaneous reperfusion of the LAD — i.e. the artery has re-opened
(c) Recurrence of chest pain and diaphoresis
With recurrence of pain there is pseudo-normalisation of the precordial T waves: the previously biphasic T waves have become prominently upright (= “hyperacute” T waves)
This apparent normalisation of the T waves indicates re-occlusion of the LAD artery
(d) Ongoing ischaemic symptoms
Following re-occlusion of the artery, there is further evolution of the anterolateral ST changes, with evolving anterior STEMI
(e) Symptoms improving
Once again there is reperfusion of the artery, only this time the ST changes are slower to resolve
(f) Now Pain Free
Now the T waves are starting to become biphasic again (Wellens Pattern A)
Shortly after this series of ECGs was taken, this patient suffered a VF arrest that was refractory to defibrillation. She was placed on a mechanical CPR device and taken to the cath lab, where she was found to have a 100% proximal LAD stenosis. This was stented, she was successfully cardioverted and subsequently made a good neurological recovery!
Differential Diagnosis of Wellens Syndrome
While the morphology of the T wave changes in Wellens syndrome is often quite distinctive, there are numerous other conditions that may produce similar patterns of precordial T-wave inversion, including:
Explore the links above to appreciate the similarities and differences between these ECG patterns.
But is this Wellens?
This ECG was initially posted as an example of Wellens syndrome. What do you make of it?
Reveal Answer
Whilst T-wave inversion in V2-3 here may appear to represent Wellens syndrome, the presence of associated T-wave inversion in V1 and lead III is highly specific for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism.
When right precordial T-wave inversion is present, the clinician should be prompted to look for other ECG features suggestive of RV dilatation, including clockwise rotation and right axis deviation.
Other features suggestive of PE here include:
Tachycardia (~100bpm)
Rightward axis (+90)
Clockwise rotation — there is a shift of the R/S transition point to V5-6. Read this case example for a more detailed explanation of clockwise rotation
The pattern of inverted and biphasic T waves is different to Wellens syndrome, affecting multiple leads (i.e. any lead with a tall R wave) rather than V2-3
In this case, the Wellens-like T waves are just a variant on the repolarisation abnormality (LV “strain”pattern) that is seen with LVH
This pattern of T wave changes:
Is most commonly seen in the lateral leads (V5-6, I, aVL)
Typically occurs in patients with high QRS voltages, e.g. due to LVH, or in young black males with benign early repolarization