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Non Q Wave MI



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Aug 13, 2009 11:48 PM

Non Q Wave MI


Ok. So I am gonna pull the "I'm still a bit of a newbie" card. I know what a STEMI is... what is looks like, get them to cath lab right away. But what in the world is a Non Q Wave MI? I've never seen anything change on an EKG with a Q wave that I know. What does it (the Q wave) look like in one of these?


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3 Comments
No. 1
from angle71054
Old Aug 16, 2009, 04:02 AM

Default Re: Non Q Wave MI
A Q-wave develops several days after a pt has a severe enough MI that it causes cell death. The Q-wave must be at least 1/3 of the height of a QRS to be clinically significant to say that the pt has had an old MI. It usually does not go way. You must see the Q-wave on a 12-lead EKG not just a monitor strip (monitor strips can be deceving). It just means that there has been an old MI. It can help us as health providers better understand when the pt had an MI.
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No. 2
from HeatherISU
Old Aug 17, 2009, 01:15 AM

Default Re: Non Q Wave MI
Thanks for your reply. So it indicates the presences of an OLD MI. Thank you so much!
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No. 3
from JustMe
Old Aug 19, 2009, 09:31 PM
Updated Aug 19, 2009 at 09:33 PM by JustMe

Default Re: Non Q Wave MI
There are 2 types of acute MI--transmural and non-transmural. A transmural MI involves the full thickness of the wall of the ventricle--shown as a STEMI on the EKG. A non-transmural MI, or non-Q wave MI, involves only partial thickness of the wall and can be diagnosed with cardiac enzymes. Changes in the EKG won't be evident until the MI evolves, i.e. flipped T waves. If the first set of enzymes is positive the patient may win a trip to the Cath Lab so that potential problems can be averted. If there's one artery blocked there may be others waiting in the wings.

Just my
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