Ecg [new] - Anterior Infarct On

An ECG cannot definitively diagnose an acute myocardial infarction without clinical correlation (symptoms and troponin). Therefore, the report should specify if this is acute (evolving ST elevation) or age-undetermined (pathologic Q waves). Option 1: Acute Anterior STEMI (Evolving) ECG REPORT

[Last, First] Date/Time: [DD/MM/YYYY HH:MM] Reason for Exam: Routine follow-up, dyspnea on exertion.

Sinus rhythm. Rate: [e.g., 95] bpm. Axis: Normal. anterior infarct on ecg

No prior ECG available / Compared to prior ECG from [date].

Normal sinus rhythm. Rate: [e.g., 78] bpm. Axis: Normal. An ECG cannot definitively diagnose an acute myocardial

Sinus rhythm at 82 bpm. Pathologic Q waves and poor R wave progression in leads V1-V4 with associated T-wave inversions. No acute ST segment elevation.

Findings are unchanged compared to ECG dated [date]. Sinus rhythm

[Last, First] Date/Time: [DD/MM/YYYY HH:MM] Reason for Exam: Chest pain, shortness of breath.