Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — Cardiac

Coronary Artery Territories Chart

Quick-reference chart for coronary artery territories — each artery organized by areas supplied, ECG leads affected, MI location, and common complications for nurses in cardiac, ICU, and emergency settings.

Educational use only. Coronary anatomy varies among individuals; right vs. left dominance affects posterior territory. This chart reflects typical right-dominant anatomy unless noted. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Coronary Artery Territories

ArteryAreas SuppliedECG LeadsCommon Complications
LMCALeft Main Coronary ArteryBifurcates into LAD and LCx — supplies majority of LV; occlusion affects both LAD and LCx territoriesDiffuse — widespread ST depression + ST elevation in aVR ± V1 (reciprocal pattern)Cardiogenic shock, acute pulmonary edema, very high mortality; often called 'widowmaker'
LADLeft Anterior DescendingAnterior wall LV, anterior interventricular septum, anterior papillary muscle (partial), bundle branches (proximal LAD)V1–V4 (anterior leads); high lateral involvement with diagonal branches: I, aVLLargest MI territory; cardiogenic shock; LBBB or RBBB; complete heart block (proximal); ventricular aneurysm; papillary muscle rupture (mitral regurgitation)
LCxLeft CircumflexLateral wall of LV, posterior wall (if left-dominant), SA node (40%), AV node (10%)I, aVL, V5–V6 (lateral leads); posterior MI: ST depression V1–V3 (reciprocal)Often clinically silent; posterior MI commonly missed; SA node dysfunction if dominant; mitral regurgitation (lateral papillary muscle)
RCARight Coronary ArteryRight ventricle, inferior wall LV (right-dominant), SA node (~60%), AV node (~90%), posterior descending artery (right-dominant)II, III, aVF (inferior leads); RV infarct: right-sided leads V4R–V6RBradycardia (SA/AV node); high-degree AV blocks (Mobitz I, complete); RV infarct → hemodynamic instability; hypotension with NTG (preload-dependent RV)
PDAPosterior Descending ArteryPosterior wall LV, posterior interventricular septum; supplied by RCA (right-dominant) or LCx (left-dominant)Posterior MI: ST depression in V1–V3 (reciprocal); tall R in V1; confirmed by ST elevation in V7–V9Missed diagnosis is the biggest risk; obtain posterior leads (V7–V9) for confirmation

MI Location Quick Reference

MI LocationST Elevation LeadsArteryCritical Watch Point
AnteriorV1–V4LAD (proximal)LBBB, complete block, cardiogenic shock
AnteroseptalV1–V2LAD (septal perforators)Bundle branch blocks
AnterolateralV1–V6, I, aVLLAD or LMCALarge territory; MR; cardiogenic shock
Lateral (high)I, aVLLCx or diagonalOften silent or atypical
Lateral (low)V5–V6LCxCheck with high lateral + anterior
InferiorII, III, aVFRCA (right-dominant)RV infarct — check V4R; avoid NTG; AV blocks
Right VentricularV4R–V6R (right-sided ECG)RCAPreload-dependent — give fluids, avoid NTG
PosteriorV7–V9 elevation (V1–V3 depression reciprocal)RCA or LCx (dominant)Missed if no posterior leads — order V7–V9

Special Situations to Know

Inferior STEMI + RV InfarctInferior STEMI (II, III, aVF) with RCA involvement puts the RV at risk. Right-sided ECG (V4R elevation ≥1 mm) confirms RV infarct. RV is preload-dependent — avoid nitroglycerin, diuretics, and vasodilators. Fluid challenge may be needed. Monitor for high-degree AV block.
Posterior MI — Missed PresentationStandard 12-lead shows ST DEPRESSION in V1–V3 (not elevation). Posterior MI mimics 'non-STEMI' on standard ECG. Always obtain posterior leads V7–V9 when ST depression in V1–V3 + tall R wave in V1 + upright T waves is seen. V7–V9 elevation ≥0.5 mm confirms posterior STEMI.
Dominant Circumflex = Left-DominantIn ~15% of patients, the LCx supplies the PDA (left-dominant system). In left-dominant anatomy, LCx occlusion affects both lateral AND inferior territories. AV node is supplied by LCx (not RCA) — AV blocks may occur with LCx occlusion.
LMCA Equivalent PatternWidespread ST depression in multiple leads + ST elevation in aVR ≥1 mm suggests LMCA or proximal LAD occlusion. This is a catastrophic pattern — cath lab activation immediately regardless of whether lead-based STEMI criteria are met.

NCLEX Pearls

  • LAD = anterior STEMI (V1–V4) — largest territory; highest mortality.
  • RCA = inferior STEMI (II, III, aVF) + RV infarct risk + AV block risk (supplies SA/AV nodes).
  • Inferior STEMI: always obtain right-sided ECG (V4R) before giving nitroglycerin.
  • LCx territory (lateral) often presents atypically — check I, aVL, V5–V6 for lateral changes.
  • Posterior MI: ST depression in V1–V3 is the clue → obtain V7–V9; do not mistake for NSTEMI.
  • LMCA occlusion: widespread ST depression + ST elevation in aVR = catastrophic — activate cath lab.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with AHA / ACC Coronary Anatomy Standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →