“…Investigators find many patients with OMI have STE that does not meet STEMI criteria, and have found many other ECG indicators of OMI, including hyperacute T-waves, terminal QRS distortion, low QRS amplitude, and more [6] . Aslanger et al recently reclassified 28% of NSTEMIs as OMI with structured interpretation using predefined OMI ECG findings, identifying a group with similar lesions and outcomes as STEMI [7] . Furthermore, some OMI have no ECG manifestations and must be diagnosed by a combination of clinical suspicion, ongoing symptoms, biomarker elevation, echocardiography, or even coronary computed tomography angiography [8] , [9] , [10] .…”