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   general   >  publications   >  Resident-and-Staff   >  2006   >  2006-07   >  2006-07_06
 
 
Published Online: May 17, 2007 - 11:48:20 PM (CDT)
Frank A. Paul, DO, FACOEP
Emergency Medicine Residency Director Kingman Regional Medical Center Kingman, Ariz

Felix J. Rogers, DO, FACC
Clinical Professor Department of Internal Medicine Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine East Lansing, Mich

A 76-year-old retired physician came to the clinic for a medical check-up. He had never experienced any serious medical problem and had no history of heart disease. His physical examination was unremarkable. A chest x-ray was ordered, revealing prominence of the right heart border in the area of the ascending aorta, which was not seen on an old x-ray taken 7 years earlier. His electrocardiogram (ECG) revealed some irregularities (Figure 1).

Questions: Does the ECG show any specific heart disease? How do you explain the loss of anterolateral R-wave forces? Is it a “Q-wave equivalent” and a marker of previous silent myocardial infarction (MI) in this patient?


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