Hi,I am Dr. Prabhakar Koregol (Cardiologist). I will be looking into your question and guiding you through the process. Please write your question below.
Frequent Palpitations, EKG Shows Possible Enteroseptal MI. What Does It Mean?
Hi I am 28 years old, I get palpitations every once in a while. I decided to do an ekg today and it reads possible Enteroseptal MI. What does that mean for me? I had a check a year ago everything was normal. I had palpitations last week and they lasted more than usual and I started coughing. I was just laying down and watching tv. I was not doing any streneous activities.
Hi there,
Thanks for writing in. I am a qualified and certified cardiologist and I read your mail with diligence.
Normal heart has an episodic premature ventricular or atrial contraction. It is some people who are more perceptive perceive this as palpitation, thumbing sensation or missing beat. As far as skipping a beat is concerned. See, our heart beats for about 100,000 times a day (72x60x24) so 1% beats to be out of rhythm that include missed beats is perfectly normal occurrence. It is not correct give them a label of arrhythmia yourself. Please ask your doctor, you will be thoroughly examined and if needed investigated accordingly. If needed a Holter examination will be done which will document number of runs of these premature beats. Then one is labelled to have arrhythmia and treatment instituted. For present I am concerned with computer generated unconfirmed report of antero septal myocardial infarction in a 28 year old person. I believe it be interpretation of EKG computer of an aberrant conducted premature atrial beat but without symptoms unless your doctor says so or I see the EKG it is not believable. We can take both the issues after you had shown yourself to a doctor on rather urgent basis. Good Luck.
With Best Wishes
Dr Anil Grover
I find this answer helpful
You found this answer helpful
Note: For further queries related to coronary artery disease and prevention, click here.
Disclaimer: These answers are for your information only and not intended to replace your relationship with your treating physician.
This is a short, free answer.
For a more detailed, immediate answer, try our premium service
[Sample answer]
We use cookies in order to offer you most relevant experience and using this website you acknowledge that you have already read and understood our
Privacy Policy
Frequent Palpitations, EKG Shows Possible Enteroseptal MI. What Does It Mean?
Hi there, Thanks for writing in. I am a qualified and certified cardiologist and I read your mail with diligence. Normal heart has an episodic premature ventricular or atrial contraction. It is some people who are more perceptive perceive this as palpitation, thumbing sensation or missing beat. As far as skipping a beat is concerned. See, our heart beats for about 100,000 times a day (72x60x24) so 1% beats to be out of rhythm that include missed beats is perfectly normal occurrence. It is not correct give them a label of arrhythmia yourself. Please ask your doctor, you will be thoroughly examined and if needed investigated accordingly. If needed a Holter examination will be done which will document number of runs of these premature beats. Then one is labelled to have arrhythmia and treatment instituted. For present I am concerned with computer generated unconfirmed report of antero septal myocardial infarction in a 28 year old person. I believe it be interpretation of EKG computer of an aberrant conducted premature atrial beat but without symptoms unless your doctor says so or I see the EKG it is not believable. We can take both the issues after you had shown yourself to a doctor on rather urgent basis. Good Luck. With Best Wishes Dr Anil Grover