T wave changes

Revision as of 04:37, 25 February 2015 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)
Types of T wave morphology
  • Normally upright in 1, 2, V3-V6
  • Negative in AVR
  • If is greater than 2/3 height of R wave then is abnormal
  • Deep symmetrical inverted T waves:
  1. Left ventricle apical hypertrophy
  2. Raised ICP (e.g. SAH)
  3. Wellen's (MI)
  4. Paced rhythm
  5. BBB's or WPW
  6. Idiopathic
  • Distribution
    • T wave is normally inverted in aVR; sometimes inverted in III, aVF, aVL, V1
  • T-wave inversions in V2-V6 are always pathologic
  • Morphology
    • Inverted, symmetric,
    • Transient changes suggests ischemia without infarction
    • Persistent changes suggests infarction (troponin elevation usually seen)
  • Pseudonormalization
    • In presence of baseline TWI (within 1 month), reocclusion causes normalization of TWI
    • Should be interpreted as evidence of ischemia

Differential Diagnosis

T Wave Inversions

See Also