Wellens' syndrome with segmental wall-motion abnormalities

Open Access Emerg Med. 2010 Dec 1:2:87-9. doi: 10.2147/OAEM.S14484. eCollection 2010.

Abstract

Wellens' syndrome is a pattern of electrocardiographic T-wave changes associated with critical, proximal left anterior descending (LAD) artery stenosis. We herein report 2 cases of Wellens' syndrome with segmental wall-motion abnormalities The first case is a 50-year-old man admitted to the emergency department with typical chest pain. Admission ECG showed biphasic T waves in leads V1-V3 with inverted T waves in leads V4-V6, and cardiac enzymes were in normal limits. The second case is a 62-year-old woman admitted to the emergency department with chest pain on rest. Admission ECG showed deeply inverted T waves in leads V1-V4, and troponin T was minimally elevated. The critical lesions in the proximal segment LAD were successfully opened with stent deployments. Wall-motion abnormalities returned to normal after intervention.

Keywords: T-wave syndrome; Wellens’ syndrome; wall-motion abnormality.

Publication types

  • Case Reports