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.