Distinguishing STEMI from Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH)
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is one of the most common causes of false-positive STEMI activation, responsible for up to 18% of all STEMI alarms.
Because LVH produces secondary repolarization abnormalities (ST elevation, ST depression, T-wave inversions), it can closely mimic acute myocardial infarction.
Correctly distinguishing true STEMI from LVH-related ST abnormalities helps avoid unnecessary catheterization lab activation, reduces costs, and prevents procedure-related risk.
Primary References:
Why LVH Mimics STEMI
LVH increases QRS voltage and alters depolarization/repolarization.
This leads to:
High-voltage QRS complexes
Secondary ST-T abnormalities
Discordant ST elevation or depression
T-wave inversions (“strain pattern”)
These changes may resemble ischemia but often reflect ventricular overload, not coronary occlusion.
ECG Features of LVH
Common diagnostic features include:
Voltage criteria (Sokolow-Lyon, Cornell)
High-amplitude R waves in lateral leads (I, aVL, V5, V6)
Deep S waves in V1–V3
ST depression in lateral leads
T-wave inversions (“strain”) in lateral leads
Slight upward-sloping ST elevation in V1–V3 (false anterior STEMI appearance)
Voltage Criteria Examples:
Reference:
ECG Criteria for LVH – Merck Manual
ECG Features Suggesting True STEMI
Signs that support acute coronary occlusion:
New ST-segment elevation at the J-point
Reciprocal ST depression in opposite leads
New Q waves (pathological)
Hyperacute T waves
Convex (“tombstone”) ST elevation
Consistent pattern across contiguous leads
True STEMI usually shows proportionate ST-segment elevation relative to QRS amplitude.
Problems with Standard STEMI Criteria in LVH
STEMI recognition becomes difficult because:
LVH produces baseline ST elevation (especially V1–V3)
LVH produces ST depression and T-wave inversion resembling ischemia
QRS voltages distort ST-segment measurements
STEMI criteria have low specificity in LVH
A small retrospective study showed that traditional STEMI criteria have only 58% specificity in patients with LVH.
Improved Criteria for STEMI Detection in LVH
Recent evidence suggests that two findings significantly improve diagnostic accuracy in LVH:
These criteria:
Have similar sensitivity to classic STEMI rules
Improve specificity to 91%
Reduce false activations by ~35%
Reference:
LVH mistaken for STEMI – EMS1
Comparison Table: STEMI vs. LVH Mimicry
| Feature | Suggests LVH | Suggests STEMI |
| QRS voltage | Very high voltage | Normal or slightly high |
| ST elevation | Mild, concave, usually in V1–V3 | Convex or straight; often >1–2 mm |
| ST/S ratio | ST elevation < 25% of S-wave depth | ST elevation > 25% of S-wave depth |
| T-wave changes | Lateral strain pattern (I, aVL, V5–V6) | Hyperacute T waves near area of infarction |
| Reciprocal changes | Rare | Common (e.g., inferior ST depression with anterior STEMI) |
| Q waves | Usually absent | New pathological Q waves |
| ST depression | Lateral leads (strain) | Reciprocal depression supporting occlusion |
| Lead distribution | Non-contiguous or inconsistent | In ≥ 2 contiguous leads |
Key Practical Tips
Always look at the ST/T ratio relative to QRS amplitude.
LVH typically shows discordant ST depression or elevation that is proportionate to QRS size.
STEMI typically shows disproportionate ST elevation, often with reciprocal changes.
Compare with prior ECG if available—LVH patterns are usually chronic.
When in doubt, obtain serial ECGs and integrate with symptoms and troponin levels.
In the presence of clear ischemic symptoms, never dismiss possible STEMI solely due to LVH.
Summary
LVH is the most common cause of false-positive STEMI interpretation.
Voltage overload causes ST changes that resemble ischemia.
Using proportionate ST elevation (>25%), contiguous lead analysis, and recognition of strain improves accuracy.
True STEMI usually includes reciprocal changes, hyperacute T waves, and disproportionate ST elevation.
Proper distinction prevents unnecessary catheterization lab activation and supports safe, evidence-based care.