Subendocardial ischemia[3] or even infarction.[4] Subendocardial means non full thickness ischemia. In contrast, ST elevation is transmural (or full thickness) ischemia
A mnemonic can be used for some causes of ST depression, namely DEPRESSED ST:[citation needed]
D - Drooping valve (mitral valve prolapse) E - Enlargement of the left ventricle P - Potassium loss R - Reciprocal ST depression (e.g. inferior wall MI) E - Encephalon hemorrhage S - Subendocardial infarct S - Subendocardial ischemia E - Embolism (pulmonary)D - Dilated cardiomyopathyS - Shock T - Toxicity (digitalis/quinidine)
Physiology
For non-transmural ischemia (subendocardial ischemia) injured cells are closer to the inside of heart wall, resulting in a systolic injury current. A systolic injury current results from a greater depolarization in healthier cells. Because the subepicardial region is more depolarized (more positive) compared to the endomyocardial cells, the current in the left ventricle flows toward the endomyocardial cells. The current flows from the more positive subepicardium to the less positive subendocardium during phase 2 of the fast fiber type depolarization, which on ECG occurs during ST segment. The positive electrodes on the anterior chest wall detect the movement of positive charge away from the electrode and record it as a downward deflection on the ECG paper.[citation needed]
Measurement
ST segment depression may be determined by measuring the vertical distance between the patient's trace and the isoelectric line at a location 2[4]-3 millimeters from the QRS complex.[citation needed]
It is significant if it is more than 1 mm in V5-V6, or 1.5 mm in AVF or III.[citation needed]
In a cardiac stress test, an ST depression of at least 1 mm after adenosine administration indicates a reversible ischaemia, while an exercise stress test requires an ST depression of at least 2 mm to significantly indicate reversible ischaemia.[6]
^Yap LB, Arshad W, Jain A, Kurbaan AS, Garvie NW (2005). "Significance of ST depression during exercise treadmill stress and adenosine infusion myocardial perfusion imaging". The International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging. 21 (2–3): 253–8, discussion 259–60. doi:10.1007/s10554-004-2458-y. PMID16015437. S2CID23204152.