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ECG Findings of Pulmonary Embolism (PE)

S1Q3T3 in PE

ECG Findings of Pulmonary Embolism (PE)

1. Sinus Tachycardia (Most Common Finding)


• Most frequent ECG abnormality in acute PE

• Heart rate usually >100 bpm

• Reflects hypoxia, pain, anxiety, and sympathetic activation



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2. S1Q3T3 Pattern (McGinn–White Sign)


• Deep S wave in Lead I

• Q wave in Lead III

• T-wave inversion in Lead III

• Suggests acute right heart strain

• Seen in <20% cases (not sensitive but classic for exams)



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3. Right Heart Strain Pattern


• T-wave inversion in V1–V4

• T-wave inversion in inferior leads (II, III, aVF)

• Reflects acute RV pressure overload

• Associated with worse prognosis



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4. Right Bundle Branch Block (RBBB)


• Incomplete or complete RBBB

• rSR′ pattern in V1

• Wide QRS if complete (>120 ms)

• Caused by acute RV dilation



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5. Right Axis Deviation


• QRS axis > +90°

• Dominant R wave in lead III

• Reflects RV strain



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6. P Pulmonale (Right Atrial Enlargement)


• Tall peaked P wave (>2.5 mm) in lead II

• Indicates acute right atrial pressure rise



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7. Atrial Arrhythmias


• Atrial fibrillation

• Atrial flutter

• Atrial tachycardia


Occur due to acute right atrial strain



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Less Common but Important Findings


• ST elevation in V1 (mimics anterior MI)

• Diffuse ST depression

• Clockwise rotation

• Low voltage (rare)



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High-Risk ECG Pattern in Massive PE


Combination of:

• Sinus tachycardia

• S1Q3T3

• RBBB

• T-wave inversion V1–V4


Suggests significant RV dysfunction and hemodynamic compromise



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Key Clinical Point


ECG in PE is neither sensitive nor specific.

Normal ECG does not rule out PE.

ECG mainly helps:

• Assess severity

• Identify RV strain

• Exclude alternative diagnoses (e.g., STEMI, pericarditis)

Comments

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