OMI (Occluding Myocardial Infarction) - ECG findings for PCI activation

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00:00-07:58 Introduction and references

Part 1: Bayes and ECGs
07:59-40:48 Bayesian thinking (OMI as example)

Part 2: OMI ECGs
40:48-55:35 Why we should consider the OMI-paradigme instead of the STEMI/NSTEMI paradigme
55:36-01:03:38 EM approach to ECG interpretation (my way)
01:03:39-01:04:46 The cheat sheat OMI / PCI activation

01:44:14-01:50:19 Ending, references
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I've noticed the following errors in this video

1: At 1:35:29 I miss that this ECG has obvious q-waves in V2-V3, and you can therefore not use the subtle anterior MI criteria for this particular ECG (se exclusion criteria on mdcalc). Consider the q-waves not part of the ECG and what I'm saying still makes sense

2: At 1:32:39 I forget to mention that if you an "inferior wall MI" pattern (ST elevation in 2 consecutive leads of II, III, aVF AND any amount of ST depression in reciprocal aVL), then if you ALSO have V1 elevation (+/- add V3R and V4R ST elevation) then consider RV infarction

Important stuff I forgot to mention:
- Pseudo-normalization: Sometimes the ECG dynamic change, looks like a normal ECG. If you have a previous ECG with an abnormality, with a new lesion, this pathology may morph into an ECG looking normal. This is called "pseudo-normalization". So just because the ECG now looks normal, doesn't mean there hasn't been dynamic changes comparted to the baseline ECG

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