No competent clinician sees this and says, "Yep, you had a heart attack." Instead, they say:
If you’ve recently received an electrocardiogram (ECG) report with the phrase it is natural to feel a sense of concern. In medical terms, this phrase sounds heavy, but in the world of clinical diagnostics, it is often a cautious "yellow flag" rather than a definitive diagnosis. Breaking Down the Language cannot rule out anterior infarct age undetermined
This is usually the "gold standard" follow-up. While an ECG looks at the heart's electricity , an ultrasound (Echo) looks at the heart's structure . If the Echo shows the anterior wall moving normally, the "infarct" on the ECG was a false alarm. No competent clinician sees this and says, "Yep,