Feeling guilty now, for a past professional crime !

Having retired, find little more time in browsing the academic images lying idle in old computers.It is intresting, still a tiring job to pick any useful learning stuff, from heaps of data hiding in different hard drives. This set of ECGs I could retrive from the year 2011, A 31-year-old male presented to our CCU at 4.50 PM. The treatment was Initiated in 10 minutes and completed in an hour, (Those days cath lab wasn’t functioning 24/7, more importantly, there was no external interference with our professional decision-making process) The ECG was repeated at 7.15 PM I think this case is much relevant even today, because it made me guilty of committing a crime*, by treating a STEMI without the help of a cath lab and discharging the patient with near normal ECG and LV function. The guilt was further amplified as I had used the lowly streptokinase, and not the glamorous Tenecteplase which could have produced a brisker and more complete TIMI 3 flow. *One of my corporate friend called it a heinous one by current standards, for not attempting to visuvalise the IRA and a possible pharmaco invasive PCI. Final message STEMI can be tackled successfully in a number of different strategies. Immediate cath lab care is an optional accessory in the majority and of course, it can be life-saving in the minority. If we are unable to differentiate which patient will truly benefit from urgent cath lab intervention, I think, we have a huge problem, with the wa...
Source: Dr.S.Venkatesan MD - Category: Cardiology Authors: Tags: Uncategorized Source Type: blogs