ROUNDS·
Cardiology

ECG Interpretation Basics & STEMI Criteria

A systematic reading order for any ECG, plus the criteria that separate a STEMI from everything else.

Systematic Reading Order

STEMI Criteria

T Wave Changes to Know

Red Flags: STEMI Equivalents

Wellens syndrome: biphasic or deeply inverted T waves in V2-V3, in a patient whose chest pain has resolved. Signals critical proximal LAD stenosis.

de Winter pattern: upsloping ST depression with tall, symmetric T waves in the precordial leads — also indicates proximal LAD occlusion without classic ST elevation.

Both patterns carry urgency similar to a classic STEMI. Don't rule out major occlusion just because ST elevation is absent.

Hypertrophy

Voltage criteria alone are insensitive but reasonably specific — a positive result is meaningful, but a negative result doesn't rule out hypertrophy, especially in obesity or significant lung disease.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a STEMI occur without ST elevation?

Yes — Wellens syndrome and the de Winter pattern represent critical coronary occlusion without meeting strict ST-elevation criteria, and should be treated with similar urgency.

What's the difference between STEMI and NSTEMI?

Both involve elevated troponin, but STEMI shows ST elevation (or an equivalent) reflecting complete coronary occlusion, while NSTEMI does not.

Why does a posterior MI need extra leads?

A standard 12-lead ECG has no leads directly over the posterior wall, so posterior MI only shows indirect changes in V1-V3. Posterior leads V7-V9 view that territory directly.

Why are voltage criteria for LVH described as insensitive but specific?

Many true LVH cases don't meet the voltage thresholds (low sensitivity), but when the thresholds are met, true hypertrophy is usually present (high specificity). Body habitus and chest wall thickness affect voltage independent of true LV mass.