Value of Posterior and Right Ventricular Leads in Comparison to the Standard 12-Lead Electrocardiogram in Evaluation of ST-Segment Elevation in Suspected Acute Myocardial Infarction

1997 
In this multicenter prospective trial, we studied posterior (V7 to V9) and right ventricular (V4R to V6R) leads to assess their accuracy compared with standard 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECGs) for the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Patients aged >34 years with suspected AMI received posterior and right ventricular leads immediately after the initial 12-lead ECG. ST elevation of 0.1 mV in 2 leads was blindly determined and inter-rater reliability estimated. AMI was diagnosed by World Health Organization criteria. The diagnostic value of nonstandard leads was determined when 12-lead ST elevation was absent and present and multivariate stepwise regression analysis was also performed. Of 533 study patients, 64.7% (345 of 533) had AMI and 24.8% received thrombolytic therapy. Posterior and right ventricular leads increased sensitivity for AMI by 8.4% (p = 0.03) but decreased specificity by 7.0% (p = 0.06). The likelihood ratios of a positive test for 12, 12 + posterior, and 12 + right ventricular ECGs were 6.4, 5.6, and 4.5, respectively. Increased AMI rates (positive predictive values) were found when ST elevation was present on 6 nonstandard leads (69.1%), on 12 leads only (88.4%), and on both 6 and 12 leads (96.8%; p <0.001). Treatment rates with thrombolytic therapy increased in parallel with this electrocardiographic gradient. Logistic regression analysis showed that 4 leads were independently predictive of AMI (p <0.001): leads I, II, V3, V5R; V9 approached statistical significance (p = 0.055). The standard ECG is not optimal for detecting ST-segment elevation in AMI, but its accuracy is only modestly improved by the addition of posterior and right ventricular leads. In this multicenter prospective trial, 0.1 mV of ST-segment elevation in posterior (V7 to V9) and right ventricular (V4R to V6R) leads was found to increase the sensitivity of the electrocardiogram for acute myocardial infarction by 8.4% (p = 0.03), but decrease specificity by 7.0% (p = 0.06); logistic regression analysis showed that 4 leads were predictive of AMI at p <0.001: I, II, V3, V5; V9 approached statistical significance (p = 0.055). The standard electrocardiogram is not optimal for detecting ST elevation in acute myocardial infarction, but its accuracy is only modestly improved by the addition of posterior and right ventricular leads.
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