Title: Basic Interpretation of Electrocardiograms
1Basic Interpretation ofElectrocardiograms
- David Putnam, MD
- Albany Medical College
2ECG Reading
3ECG Reading
- Rhythm Strip
- A. Rate B. Rhythm C. Intervals
- Axis
- Chamber Enlargement
- Myocardial Infarction and Ischemia
4ECG Reading Rate
- Can be calculated by dividing the number of large
boxes ( each 200 msec long ) contained in a R-R
interval into 300
5ECG Reading Rhythm
- A. Analyze for the following
- Varying rhythm
- Rapid/Slow rhythm
- Extra beats
- Heart Blocks
6Supraventricular Rhythms
- Sinus rhythms
- Atrial rhythm
- Wandering atrial pacemaker
- Multifocal atrial tachycardia
- Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia
- Atrial fibrillation/flutter
- Junctional rhythm
7Sinus Rhythms
- P-wave preceeds each QRS complex
- PR interval is constant
- P-wave morphology remains constant
8Sinus Rhythms
- Sinus Rhythm rate 60 to 100 in adults ( some
authors suggest 50 to 90 ) - Sinus Tachycardia rate greater than 90 to 100 (
usually less than 160 to 170 ) - Sinus Bradycardia rate less than 50 to 60
- Sinus Arrhythmia rate 60 to 100, but P-P
interval varies more than 160 msec
9Wandering Atrial Pacemaker
- Amplitude and morphology of P wave varies from
beat to beat - Variable PR, PP, RR intervals
- Atrial rate 60 to 100
10Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia
- P waves of varying morphology
- Absence of one dominant atrial pacemaker
- Variable PR, PP, RR intervals
- Atrial rate above 100
11Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia
- Abnormal P-waves
- Atrial rate 140 to 220
- Regular rhythm
- QRS complex after each P-wave ( Usually narrow,
but may be wide from aberrant conduction ) - Secondary ST and T-wave changes may occur
- Abrupt onset and termination
12Atrial Tachycardia with AV Block
- Abnormal P-waves
- Atrial rate 150 to 220
- Isoelectric intervals between P-waves
- AV block
13Atrial Fibrillation
- P waves are absent
- Atrial activity represented by fibrillatory waves
- Ventricular rhythm ( in absence of AV block ) is
irregularly irregular
14Atrial Flutter
- Atrial deflections consist of rapid regular
undulations (F waves) giving rise to sawtooth
appearance in some leads - Atrial rate usually between 250 and 350
- Rate and regularity of ventricular complexes are
variable - QRS complex may be normal or abnormal
15Junctional Rhythm
- Rate normally 40 to 55
- QRS complex narrow
- P wave may precede , superimpose on, or follow
QRS complex - PR
16Ventricular Rhythms
- Idioventricular rhythm
- Accelerated idioventricular rhythm
- Ventricular tachycardia
- Ventricular fibrillation
- Paced rhythm
17Idioventricular Rhythm
- Abnormal and wide QRS complex
- Secondary ST and T wave changes
- Ventricular rate 30 to 40
18Ventricular Tachycardia
- Abnormal and wide QRS complex
- Secondary ST and T wave changes
- Ventricular rate 140 to 200
- Regular or slightly irregular
- AV dissociation
- Capture/fusion beats may be present
19Atrioventricular Blocks
- First degree
- Second degree
- Third degree
20First Degree AV Block
- P-R interval 200 msec
- Each P wave is followed by a QRS complex
21Type I Second-Degree AV Block
- Progressive lengthening of P-R interval until a P
wave is blocked - Progressive shortening of R-R interval until a P
wave is blocked - Group beating
22Type II Second-Degree AV Block
- Intermittent blocked P waves
- P-R intervals remain constant in the conducted
beats
23Third Degree ( Complete ) AV Block
- Independence of the atrial and ventricular
activities - Atrial rate is faster than the ventricular rate
- Ventricular rate maintained by either a
junctional or an idioventricular pacemaker
24Extra Beats
- Premature atrial contractions
- Premature junctional contractions
- Premature ventricular contractions
25Premature Atrial Contractions
- Originates from ectopic focus in atrium
- P-wave is premature in relation to the basic
sinus rhythm - P-wave morphology is abnormal
- P-R interval may be normal, short, or long
- Ventricular complex may be normal, aberrant, or
blocked - Cycle length after APC is long but not full
compensatory pause
26Premature Junctional Contractions
- Originates from ectopic focus in AV node
- P-waves inverted in II, III, aVF
- P-wave may precede, superimpose on, or follow the
QRS complex - P-R interval less than 110 msec
- Ventricular complex may be normal, aberrant, or
blocked - Cycle length after premature beat is long but not
full compensatory pause
27Premature Ventricular Contractions
- VPCs from the same focus tend to have constant
coupling interval - QRS complex is abnormal in duration and
configuration - Secondary ST and T-wave changes
- Retrograde capture of the atria may or may not
occur
28ECG Reading Normal Intervals
- PR 120 to 200 msec
- QRS 60 to 100 msec
- QT 30 to 46 msec
- Increases with bradycardia, decreases with
tachycardia - Tends to be longer in women
- Should be less than half of the R to R interval
29Intraventricular Conduction Delays
30Left Bundle Branch Block
- QRS duration 120 msec or greater
- Monophasic R in I, V5, V6, which is usually
notched or slurred - Absence of Q wave in I, V5, V6
31Right Bundle Branch Block
- QRS duration 120 msec or greater
- Secondary R wave (R) in right precordial leads
with Rinitial R wave - Wide S wave in I, V5, V6
32ECG Reading Axis
- Normal Axis QRS upright in I, aVF
- Left Axis Deviation QRS upright in I, inverted
in aVF - Right Axis Deviation QRS inverted in I, upright
in aVF - Extreme Right Axis Deviation QRS inverted in I,
aVF
33Chamber Enlargement
34Left Atrial Enlargement
- Wide P wave, 110 msec in duration in any lead
- Notch in the P wave in any lead with the two
peaks 400 msec apart - Negative deflection in terminal portion of P wave
in V1 1 mm deep and 1mm wide
35Right Atrial Enlargement
- P wave tall and peaked in II, III, aVF
- P wave amplitude 2.5
36Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
- Major Criteria
- Increased QRS voltage in standard leads ( R wave
in I plus S wave in III 25 mm ) - Increased precordial voltage ( S wave in V1 plus
R wave in V5/V6 35 mm - ST segment and T wave abnormalities
- Left atrial abnormality
37Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
- Other Criteria
- R wave in aVL 11 mm
- R or S wave in any limb lead 20 mm
- R wave in V5/V6 30 mm
- S wave in V1/V2 30 mm
38Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
- Possible LVH 1 of first 3 criteria
- Probable LVH 2 of major criteria
- Definite LVH 3 of major criteria
39Right Ventricular Hypertrophy
- Tall R wave in V1 ( 7 mm )
- Right axis deviation
- R/S ratio in V1 1
- rSR in V1 with R 10 mm
- Inverted T waves in V1 and sometimes in V2, V3
- Deep S waves V4 to V6 are common
40Myocardial Infarction/Ischemia
41Myocardial Infarction/Ischemia
- ST segment depression subendocardial ischemia
- ST segment elevation transmural ischemia
- Q-wave transmural infarction
42Q Waves
- Pathological Q waves are at least 40 msec in
duration and as deep as 1/4 to1/3 the height of
the QRS complex - Normal, non-pathological Qs are often seen in I,
aVL, V5, V6 from septal depolarization - Normal, non-pathological Q may be seen in III
43Infarct Location
- II, III, aVF
- V1 to V2
- V1 to V2
- V2 to V4
- V3 to V5
- V5 to V6
- I, aVL
- Inferior
- Posterior
- Right
- Anteroseptal
- Anterior
- Apical
- High Lateral
44LBBB ECG Diagnosis of Acute MI
- Concordant ST-segment elevation 1 mm
- Discordant ST-segment elevation 5 mm
- ST-segment depression V1, V2, or V3
- NEJM 1996(Feb)334481-7.