AI ECG Findings Interpreter (Text Input) — Rounds AI
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Citation-first clinical tool

AI ECG Findings Interpreter (Text Input)

The ECG Findings Interpreter takes written ECG findings — rate, rhythm, axis, intervals, ST/T changes, conduction abnormalities — and returns a structured interpretation framework, the diagnoses commonly associated with the described pattern, the must-not-miss patterns (STEMI, Wellens, Brugada, posterior MI), and the sources (ACC/AHA, ESC, LITFL ECG library) the clinician should open to verify. The tool does not read ECG images and is not a substitute for cardiology consultation; it organises clinician-typed findings into a teaching-first framework.

This tool is for educational and decision-support use only. It does not replace independent clinical judgement. Always verify against the current guideline, FDA label, or specialty reference cited below before acting. Do not enter patient identifiers (name, MRN, dates of service).

Tool

This tool does not read images. Type rate, rhythm, axis, intervals, and ST/T descriptors.
ACC / AHA / ESC ECG interpretation references (2024) — ACC / AHA / ESC / LITFL — read source Primary publication: Surawicz B et al., Circulation 2009 (ECG standardization)

Who this is for

  • Medical students learning ECG interpretation
  • Internal medicine residents on call
  • Hospitalists organising overnight ECG findings

Frequently asked questions

Does this read ECG images?
No. The tool takes the clinician's written description (rate, rhythm, axis, intervals, ST/T changes). Computerised ECG interpretation requires the actual tracing.
Will it tell me whether to activate the cath lab?
No. The tool flags must-not-miss patterns and points to the relevant guideline. Activation decisions are clinical and protocol-driven.
Is it useful for teaching?
Yes — it forces a structured framework (rate/rhythm/axis/intervals/ST-T/conduction) and names patterns to verify, which is well-suited to learner discussion.
Are paediatric ECGs supported?
Adult conventions dominate the output. For paediatric ECGs, age-specific normal values apply; consult paediatric references.
What if my findings are minimal?
Minimal findings still produce a structured interpretation; the tool will state that no specific pattern emerges and prompt to revisit if symptoms or serial tracings change.
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