Sandbox:Mitra3
All patients with acute inferior wall myocardial infarction (ST elevation in leads II, III, aVF) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Obtain right-sided precordial leads | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
>= 1mm ST elevation in lead V4R | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Highly suggestive of RVMI | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Physical examination | Echocardiography | Coronary Angiography | Hemodynamic study | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
❑ Classic triad of:
• Hypotension | ❑ RV dilatation ❑ Depressed RV systolic function ❑ RV wall akinesia or dyskinesia ❑ RA enlargement ❑ Elevated pulmonary pressures ❑ Pulmonary regurgitation ❑ Tricuspid regurgitation ❑ Increased right atrial pressure | Gold standard diagnostic modality
❑ In the majority of RVMI:
• The culprit artery: Proximal RCA | ❑ Hemodynamically significant RVMI: • Increased RAP>10 mmHg • RAP to PCWP ratio >0.8 (normal<0.6) • RAP within 5 mmHg of the PCWP • Reduced cardiac index • Disproportionate elevation of right-sided filling pressures: Hallmark of RVMI ❑ In concomitant LV dysfunction: • RAP to PCWP ratio can change ❑ Additional hemodynamic changes: •Prominent Y-descend of the RAP •Drop of the systemic arterial pressure >10 mmHg with inspiration • "Dip and plateau" morphology and equalization of the diastolic filling pressures | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||