McGraw Hill's AccessMedicine
A-Z Index   Librarians   Newsletter   Subscriptions   About   Advisory Board   Contact Us   Help
   
McGraw-Hill Medical
(Log In)
Home Textbooks Video & Audio Self Assessments Drugs Updates Image Index dxTests Diagnosaurus Guidelines quickam Case Files Patient Education Health News RSS
select
Search Enable Autosuggest Advanced
Search
About
Search
< Go back

Images, Video & Audio Search Results: myocardial infarction of inferior wall, acute


Limit by resource:

ALL Resources (13)
 – Harrison's Online (11)
 – The Atlas of Emergency Medicine (2)
Download free QuickTime player
Download Flash 8 or higher

1-13 of 13 Results


1. Figure e23-6. ECG shows sinus bradycardia, an accelerated idioventricular rhythm and isorhythmic...
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock

View in Context


2. Figure e23-7. Top: Preintervention. Bottom: Postintervention. As soon...
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock

View in Context


3. Video e23-11. Angiography of the non-infarct left coronary shows unexpected distal left main bifurcation stenosis with possible superimposed thrombus.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


4. Video e23-12. The right coronary artery is occluded proximally.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


5. Video e23-13. Guidewire passage restores antegrade flow, exposing extensive linear thrombus and stenosis in the mid-RCA. Elapsed time since arrival in the catheterization laboratory—10 min.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


6. Video e23-14. Some improvement in the filling defect after suction thrombectomy.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


7. Video e23-15. Positioning a 3.5 x 32 mm drug-eluting stent to cover the culprit lesion.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


8. Video e23-16. Stent deployment.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


9. Video e23-17. Inferior MI with cardiogenic shock: Post-stent.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


10. Video e23-18. Post-stent in shallow RAO cranial projection shows brisk flow in a very dominant right coronary artery. Elapsed time since catheterization laboratory arrival < 20 min.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


11. Video e23-19. Sheath injection shows entry into the common femoral artery just above a moderate lesion. An intraaortic balloon pump was placed to stabilize the patient for bypass surgery of the left coronary artery the following day. Peak CPK was 337 (upper limit of normal = 200), indicating an aborted myocardial infarction with this very early reperfusion.
Harrison's Online > Chapter e23. Atlas of Percutaneous Revascularization > Case 2: Inferior MI with Cardiogenic Shock


12. Figure 23.2A. Acute Inferior-Posterior Myocardial Infarction. (ECG contributor: James V....
The Atlas of Emergency Medicine > Chapter 23. ECG Abnormalities > Part 1: ST-T Abnormalities > Acute Inferior Myocardial Infarction > ECG Findings

View in Context


13. Figure 23.2B. ST-segment elevation is present in the inferior leads (II, III, aVF) (arrow), with...
The Atlas of Emergency Medicine > Chapter 23. ECG Abnormalities > Part 1: ST-T Abnormalities > Acute Inferior Myocardial Infarction > ECG Findings

View in Context


1-13 of 13 Results

 
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies. All rights reserved.
Privacy Notice. Any use is subject to the Terms of Use and Notice.