Table of Contents

Sample ECG Images: STEMI vs. LVH

This page provides real, web-accessible ECG examples illustrating the differences between ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). All images come from Wikimedia Commons and are freely available for educational use.

Use these ECGs to compare:


Anterior STEMI

This ECG shows classic acute anterior STEMI with marked ST elevation in leads V2–V4.

Anterior STEMI (Wikimedia Commons)

Key features:


Inferior STEMI

Example of inferior STEMI with ST elevation in leads II, III, and aVF.

Inferior STEMI (Wikimedia Commons)

Key features:


Posterior MI (Reciprocal Pattern)

Posterior MI often presents as ST depression in V1–V3 with tall R waves—reciprocal of posterior ST elevation.

Posterior MI (reciprocal changes)

Key features:


LVH With Strain Pattern

Classic left ventricular hypertrophy using Sokolow-Lyon and Cornell voltage criteria, with secondary ST-T abnormalities.

Image to be added

Key features:


LVH Mimicking STEMI (False STEMI Activation)

Example where LVH leads to ST elevation, especially in V1–V3, resembling anterior STEMI.

Image to be added

Key features:


STEMI vs. LVH: Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature STEMI Example LVH Example
ST elevation Disproportionate, convex, contiguous leads Mild, concave, proportionate to QRS voltage
Reciprocal changes Common (supportive of occlusion) Rare
QRS voltage Usually normal Very high voltage
T waves Hyperacute near infarct location Inverted in lateral leads (strain pattern)
ST/S ratio > 25% suggests STEMI < 25% suggests LVH
Distribution Coronary territory (anterior, inferior, lateral, etc.) Not confined to coronary pattern

How to Use These Images for Teaching


Additional High-Quality, Open-Access Image Sources