Criteria of Culprit Artery in Inferior Wall STEMI Identifying the culprit artery (RCA vs LCX) in inferior wall STEMI from surface ECG helps anticipate complications, guide cath strategy, and assess myocardial area at risk. This post summarizes ECG-based criteria commonly used to differentiate RCA from LCX occlusion. ST Elevation in Leads III and II Key principle: Lead III reflects RCA territory more strongly than lead II Findings favoring RCA occlusion ST elevation in lead III > lead II ST depression in aVL greater than lead I These patterns indicate an injury vector directed inferiorly and rightward, consistent with RCA involvement. --- Role of Lateral Precordial Leads (V5–V6) --- V5 and V6 have limited value in differentiating RCA from LCX occlusion Presence of ST elevation in V5–V6 suggests: Larger myocardial area at risk Possible extension beyond isolated inferior infarction They should be interpreted as markers of infarct size rather than culprit artery. --- ST-Segment Be...
Dr. Usman's Cardiology Notes
Cardiology Notes: Clinical Cases including ECG, Echocardiography, Cath, and MOCK Exams to sharpen your cardiology data interpretation skills. Healthcare is stressful!!! Learning cardiology shouldn't be !!!