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Powerful Medical
3. November 2024
5 min to read

State-of-the-Art Review – From ST-Segment Elevation MI to Occlusion MI: The New Paradigm Shift in Acute Myocardial Infarction

From ST-Segment Elevation MI to Occlusion MI

Overview:

This state-of-the-art review explores the evolution of heart attack classification, challenging the limitations of the standard-of-care STEMI/NSTEMI framework. It advocates for a shift toward diagnosing heart attacks based on the presence of acute vessel occlusion rather than relying solely on standard ECG criteria. By redefining how myocardial infarctions are identified and managed, this approach has the potential to reduce misdiagnoses, optimize triage, and refine treatment prioritization in emergency cardiology.

Published In: Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC) – JACC Advances
Presented Date: November 03, 2024

Introduction

A generation ago thrombolytic therapy led to a paradigm shift in myocardial infarction (MI), from Q-wave/non-Q-wave to ST-segment elevation MI (STEMI) vs non-STEMI. Using STE on the electrocardiogram (ECG) as a surrogate marker for acute coronary occlusion (ACO) allowed for rapid diagnosis and treatment. But the vast research catalyzed by the STEMI paradigm has revealed increasing anomalies: 25% of “non-STEMI” have ACO with delayed reperfusion and higher mortality.

Studying these limitations has given rise to the occlusion MI (OMI) paradigm, based on the presence or absence of ACO in the patient rather than STE on ECG. The OMI paradigm shift harnesses advanced ECG interpretation aided by artificial intelligence, complementary bedside echocardiography and advanced imaging, and clinical signs of refractory ischemia, and offers the next opportunity to transform emergency cardiology and improve patient care. This State-of-the-Art Review examines the paradigm shifts from Q wave to STEMI to OMI.

Highlights

  • The STEMI paradigm transformed emergency cardiology, but there is increasing recognition of its limitations.
  • STEMI criteria is a poor surrogate marker for acute coronary occlusion, leading to delayed reperfusion.
  • Evidence-based advances can identify OMI not meeting STEMI criteria, and false positive STEMI.
  • The OMI paradigm harnesses advanced ECG interpretation aided by artificial intelligence, echocardiography, and advanced imaging.

Authors: Jesse McLaren, José Nunes de Alencar, Emre K. Aslanger, H Pendell Meyers, and Stephen W. Smith

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Powerful Medical leads one of the most important shifts in modern medicine by augmenting human-made clinical decisions with artificial intelligence. Our primary focus is on cardiovascular diseases, the world’s leading cause of death.

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PMcardio is a CE-certified AI that reads ECGs and offers a complex assessment of 49 cardiac conditions. Clinically validated in 15+ studies and trusted by over 100,000 clinicians, it delivers rapid, expert‑level interpretations, empowering emergency physicians, GPs, nurses, paramedics, and cardiologists to act with confidence at the point of care. Available for Individuals and Organizations.

About Powerful Medical

Established in 2017, Powerful Medical has embarked on a mission to revolutionize the diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. We are a medical company backed by 28 world-class cardiologists and led by our expert Scientific Board with decades of experience in daily patient care, clinical research, and medical devices. The results of our research are implemented, developed, certified, and brought to market by our 50+ strong interdisciplinary team of physicians, data scientists, AI experts, software engineers, regulatory specialists, and commercial teams.

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Relevant Publications

Can an AI ECG algorithm improve diagnostic accuracy for acute coronary occlusion in the difficult subset of canceled catheterization lab activations?

Discordance in ECG interpretation between Emergency Medicine and Cardiology teams is common, and within canceled STEMI activations, a true acute coronary occlusion myocardial infarction (OMI) can go unrecognized. This retrospective study examined whether an AI ECG algorithm (Queen of Hearts™) could improve OMI detection in this difficult subset. Across three referral centers, the investigators analyzed 185 activations canceled for not meeting STEMI criteria, of which 17 met the definition of a missed OMI. The AI algorithm identified 16 of 17 cases, far exceeding STEMI criteria in sensitivity (94.1% vs. 47.1%), supporting its use as an adjunct to clinical judgment in ambiguous cases.

Artificial Intelligence-Assisted, ECG-Based Triage of Patients With Chest Pain to Immediate Invasive Treatment

Rapid identification of acute coronary occlusion (ACO) is critical in chest pain patients, yet conventional STEMI criteria miss occlusion in many NSTEMI cases, delaying life-saving invasive treatment. This retrospective study tested whether a deep learning ECG AI model could improve ACO detection in an unselected cohort of more than 4,000 consecutive patients from a German chest pain unit. Each 12-lead ECG was assessed using both standard STEMI criteria and the AI model, with ACO independently adjudicated by a blinded physician. The AI model clearly outperformed STEMI criteria, identifying 73 of 104 ACO cases versus 30 (area under the curve 0.958 vs. 0.589), with fewer false positives. The findings suggest AI-assisted ECG interpretation can detect subtle ischemic changes beyond established criteria and support faster triage of NSTE-ACO patients to immediate invasive care.

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