12-lead ECG interpretation (in-hospital)
Reviewed by Judy Haluka
Last updated: November 25, 2014
Changes: Initial quiz creation and review
Changes: Initial quiz creation and review

You are working the midnight shift in the coronary care unit. You are taking care of a 52-year-old female patient who was admitted from the emergency department earlier in the day to rule out coronary artery disease. She had chest pain that was relieved by nitroglycerin in the emergency department. Her ECG in the emergency department was within normal limits. She is scheduled for an elective cardiac catheterization in the morning. She calls you to her room because the middle of her chest feels heavy and it seems to go all the way into her back.
about 3–5 minutes
You are working the midnight shift in the coronary care unit. You are taking care of a 52-year-old female patient who was admitted from the emergency department earlier in the day to rule out coronary artery disease. She had chest pain that was relieved by nitroglycerin in the emergency department. Her ECG in the emergency department was within normal limits. She is scheduled for an elective cardiac catheterization in the morning. She calls you to her room because the middle of her chest feels heavy and it seems to go all the way into her back.
Question 1 of 6
You complete an ECG and it reveals the following. It appears that your patient is

Question 2 of 6
You can make this diagnosis because the ECG reveals

Question 3 of 6
Given the patient's ECG you should

Question 4 of 6
An inferior wall infarction may be associated with
Question 5 of 6
The following ECG reveals which type of myocardial infarction?

Question 6 of 6
An anterior wall infarction is associated with the occlusion of which coronary artery?
Get an email copy of your results now, and a reminder when you need to recertify:
Get results and all quiz resources via email
Please provide email address.
Please verify or enter a different email address:
You scored #%

Correct answers
- An acute inferiolateral wall infarction.
- ST elevation in leads II, III and aVF.
- Notify the physician immediately, expect immediate cardiac catheterization.
- Right ventricular infarction.
- Anterior wall
- Left anterior descending
How we reviewed this article
Our experts continually monitor the medical science space, and we update our articles when new information becomes available.
- Current versionMail the author of this pageEmail
- Jul 13, 2026
Reviewed by:
Judy Haluka Judy has helped write or review several medical publications for us. Everything that she works on will clearly include Judy’s name.- Nov 25, 2014
Copy edited by:
Copy editorsChanges: Initial quiz creation and review