Pericarditis: Difference between revisions

From ECGpedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#Redirect [[Clinical_Disorders#Pericarditis]]
[[Image:Stadia_pericarditis.png|thumb| Several stages of pericarditis]]
[[Image:ptadepressie.png|thumb| This enlargement shows clear PTa depression]]
 
 
Pericarditis is an inflammation of the pericardium. This can lead to ST elevation in all leads. Therefore, it is important to distinguish pericarditis from a [[myocardial infarction]], which has more acute complaints and ST-elevations are limited to the infarct area.
 
In pericarditis four stages can be distinguished on the ECG:
*stage I:    ST elevation in all leads. PTa depression (depression between the end of the P-wave and the beginning of the QRS- complex)
*stage II:  pseudonormalisation (transition)
*stage III:  inverted T-waves
*stage IV:  normalisation
 
Keep into account that in stage I pericarditis, ST-elevation is present in all leads except in aVR, V1 and III.
{{clr}}
==Examples==
<gallery>
Image:ptadepressieecg.png| The 12 lead ECG of this patient shows PTa depression, but no ST elevation
Image:12leadpericarditis.png| Another 12 lead example of pericarditis.
Image:ECG000026.jpg| Acute pericarditis with clear diffuse ST elevation and some PTa depression
</gallery>
==External Links==
[[w:Pericarditis|Pericarditis]] on Wikipedia

Latest revision as of 10:02, 24 August 2009

Several stages of pericarditis
This enlargement shows clear PTa depression


Pericarditis is an inflammation of the pericardium. This can lead to ST elevation in all leads. Therefore, it is important to distinguish pericarditis from a myocardial infarction, which has more acute complaints and ST-elevations are limited to the infarct area.

In pericarditis four stages can be distinguished on the ECG:

  • stage I: ST elevation in all leads. PTa depression (depression between the end of the P-wave and the beginning of the QRS- complex)
  • stage II: pseudonormalisation (transition)
  • stage III: inverted T-waves
  • stage IV: normalisation

Keep into account that in stage I pericarditis, ST-elevation is present in all leads except in aVR, V1 and III.

Examples

External Links

Pericarditis on Wikipedia