Circulation Journal
Online ISSN : 1347-4820
Print ISSN : 1346-9843
ISSN-L : 1346-9843
INOCA
High Detectability of Prehospital 12-Lead Electrocardiogram in Diagnosing Spasm-Induced Acute Coronary Syndrome
Jin KirigayaYasushi Matsuzawa Masami KosugeTakeru AbeNoriaki IwahashiKengo TerasakaHisaya KondoKensuke MatsushitaMasaomi GohbaraKozo OkadaMasaaki KonishiToshiaki EbinaTeruyasu SuganoKiyoshi Hibi
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Supplementary material

2024 Volume 88 Issue 11 Pages 1800-1808

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Abstract

Background: The importance of prehospital (PH) electrocardiograms (ECG) recorded by emergency medical services (EMS) for diagnosing coronary artery spasm-induced acute coronary syndrome (CS-ACS) remains unclear.

Methods and Results: We enrolled 340 consecutive patients with ACS who were transported by EMS within 12 h of symptom onset. According to Japanese Circulation Society guidelines, CS-ACS (n=48) was diagnosed with or without a pharmacological provocation test (n=34 and n=14, respectively). Obstructive coronary artery-induced ACS (OC-ACS; n=292) was defined as ACS with a culprit lesion showing 99% stenosis or >75% stenosis with plaque rupture or thrombosis observed via angiographic and intravascular imaging. Ischemic ECG findings included ST-segment deviation (elevation or depression) and negative T and U waves. In CS-ACS, the prevalence of ST-segment deviation decreased significantly from PH-ECG to emergency room (ER) ECG (77.0% vs. 35.4%; P<0.001), as did the prevalence of overall ECG abnormalities (81.2% vs. 45.8%; P<0.001). Conversely, in OC-ACS, there was a similar prevalence on PH-ECG and ER-ECG of ST-segment deviations (94.8% vs. 92.8%, respectively; P=0.057) and abnormal ECG findings (96.9% vs. 95.2%, respectively; P=0.058). Patients with abnormal PH-ECG findings that disappeared upon arrival at hospital without ER-ECG or troponin abnormalities were more frequent in the CS-ACS than OC-ACS group (20.8% vs. 1.0%; P<0.001).

Conclusions: PH-ECG is valuable for detecting abnormal ECG findings that disappear upon arrival at hospital in CS-ACS patients.

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© 2024, THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons [Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International] license.
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