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Diastolic Stress Echocardiography

 

Most dangerous ECGs don’t always have the biggest ST elevation.

The most dangerous ECGs don’t always have the biggest ST elevation. If you’re staring at V2–V3 trying to decide between Early Repolarization and a subtle LAD occlusion, stop looking at the ST segment and look at the Terminal QRS. What is Terminal QRS Distortion? It’s a binary finding. In V2 or V3, ask yourself: Is the S-wave gone? Is the J-wave gone? If the answer to both is YES, you are looking at Grade III ischemia. The Stats: Specificity: ~100% vs. Early Repolarization. BER simply doesn’t do this. Sensitivity: ~20–35%. It won’t catch every STEMI, but when it’s there, it’s a “rule-in” sign. Risk: Associated with larger infarct size (CMR-proven) and higher rates of heart failure. The Logic: This is depolarization failing in real-time. Severe ischemia slows conduction so much that the end of the QRS gets “swallowed” by the repolarization phase. Takeaway: Millimeters can lie. Morphology rarely does. If the S-wave is missing in the anterior leads, call the lab.

AHA 2026 Schema for Acute Pulmonary Embolism

Assessment of Pulmonary Embolism (PE) Pulmonary embolism (PE) is a potentially life-threatening condition requiring rapid, structured, and guideline-directed evaluation. Early risk stratification determines urgency of imaging, need for thrombolysis, and level of care. This post summarizes a practical, ESC-aligned approach to assessment of PE. 1. Clinical Suspicion Always think of PE in patients with: Acute unexplained dyspnea Pleuritic chest pain Hemoptysis Syncope Unexplained tachycardia New hypoxia Risk Factors Recent surgery or immobilization Active cancer Previous VTE Pregnancy/postpartum OCP use Thrombophilia Obesity 2. Hemodynamic Assessment (First Step) Immediately determine if the patient is: A. Hemodynamically Unstable (High-Risk PE) SBP <90 mmHg Drop in SBP ≥40 mmHg Shock or cardiac arrest → Urgent bedside echocardiography → If RV dysfunction present → treat as high-risk PE (consider thrombolysis) 3. Clinical Probability Assessment Use ...

AHA - Dyslipidemia Primary Prevention Guidelines

Dyslipidemia Primary Prevention Guidelines (focusing on preventing first cardiovascular events) 1. Cardiovascular Risk Assessment • All adults should have their ASCVD risk estimated using a validated risk calculator (e.g., ACC/AHA pooled cohort risk score, QRISK3, Framingham Risk Score) to guide prevention strategies. Risk factors include age, sex, blood pressure, smoking, diabetes, lipid levels, family history, and others.  • Reassess risk periodically (e.g., every 4–6 years in adults without disease).  2. Lifestyle Modification (First-Line in All Individuals) • Healthy diet: Emphasize vegetables, fruits, whole grains, lean proteins, legumes, nuts; reduce saturated fat, trans fats and dietary cholesterol.  • Physical activity: ≥150 minutes/week of moderate-intensity or ≥75 minutes/week of vigorous aerobic exercise.  • Weight management: Aim for BMI 18.5–24.9 and waist circumference reduction.  • Smoking cessation and blood pressure/glucose control.  3. Lip...

Pulmonary Vein (PV) Doppler Patterns

  Pulmonary Vein (PV) Doppler Patterns – Normal and in Disease Pulmonary vein Doppler is recorded using pulsed-wave Doppler (usually from apical 4-chamber view for right upper PV or by TEE). It reflects left atrial (LA) pressure and compliance, and is essential in diastology and mitral valve assessment. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 1. Normal Pulmonary Vein Doppler Pattern Normal waveform has three components: 1️⃣ S wave (Systolic forward flow) • Occurs during LV systole • Blood flows from pulmonary veins → LA • Normally S ≥ D in younger adults • Reflects LA relaxation and descent of mitral annulus 2️⃣ D wave (Diastolic forward flow) • Occurs during early LV diastole • Corresponds to mitral E wave • Reflects LA pressure and LV relaxation 3️⃣ Ar wave (Atrial reversal) • Occurs during atrial contraction • Small retrograde flow into pulmonary veins • Normally: Ar velocity < 35 cm/s Ar duration < mitral A duration 👉 Normal Pattern: S wave dominant or equal to D Small Ar reversal ━━━━━━━━━━...

ESC Guidelines - Congenital AV Block – Pacing Indications

  Congenital AV Block – Pacing Indications Congenital atrioventricular (AV) block may be isolated (often immune-mediated due to maternal anti-Ro/SSA or anti-La antibodies) or associated with structural heart disease (e.g., congenitally corrected TGA). Pacing decisions depend on symptoms, ventricular rate, ventricular function, and risk markers. --- 1. Class I Indications (Permanent Pacemaker Recommended) 1. Symptomatic bradycardia Syncope, presyncope Heart failure Exercise intolerance 2. Asymptomatic complete (3rd-degree) AV block with: Wide QRS escape rhythm Ventricular dysfunction Complex ventricular ectopy Prolonged QT interval 3. Neonates/Infants with complete AV block and: Ventricular rate <55 bpm Ventricular rate <70 bpm if associated with congenital heart disease 4. Postoperative advanced AV block Persisting >7–10 days after congenital cardiac surgery --- 2. Class IIa Indications (Reasonable to Pace) 1. Asymptomatic complete AV block beyond infancy with: Average hea...

Vericiguat in Heart Failure

Vericiguat in Heart Failure: Mechanism, Evidence, Dosing, and Clinical Positiom Introduction Vericiguat is a novel oral soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) stimulator approved for patients with symptomatic chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) who have had recent worsening heart failure despite guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT). It targets the nitric oxide–sGC–cyclic GMP pathway, which is impaired in advanced heart failure. This article provides a clinically focused, guideline-oriented review of vericiguat for practicing physicians and cardiology trainees. --- Pathophysiologic Rationale In chronic HFrEF: Endothelial dysfunction reduces nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability Oxidative stress impairs soluble guanylate cyclase activity Reduced cyclic GMP (cGMP) leads to: Increased vascular tone Myocardial stiffness Fibrosis Progressive ventricular remodeling Vericiguat directly stimulates soluble guanylate cyclase and enhances its sensitivity to endogenous NO, restor...