Lead Avr PDF
Lead Avr PDF
Lead Avr PDF
Chapter
Cardiology
22
M Chenniappan
INTRODUCTION
Lead aVR, one of the 12 electrocardiographic leads, is frequently
ignored in clinical medicine. In fact, many clinicians refer to the
12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) as the 11-lead ECG, noting the
commonly held belief that lead aVR rarely offers clinically useful
information.1 The augmented limb leads were developed to derive
more localized information than the bipolar leads I, II and III could
offer. For this purpose from the existing limb electrodes, new leads
aVR, aVF and aVL were constructed, being unipolar leads looking at
the right, left and lower part of the heart with the reference electrode
constructed from the other limb electrodes. Thus, the purpose of lead
aVR was to obtain specific information from the right upper side of
the heart, such as the outflow tract of the right ventricle and the basal
part of the septum. In practice, however, most electrocardiographers
consider lead aVR as giving reciprocal information from the left
lateral side, being already covered by the leads aVL, II, V5 and V6.
This has been the reason that lead aVR has become largely ignored.2,3
Moreover as all the depolarization are going away from this lead,
all waves are negative (P, QRS, T) in this lead (Figure 1).
Section 4
Figure 2: Left main coronary artery disease showing ST elevation in lead aVR more than V1
Figure 3: Proximal left anterior descending artery disease, lead V1 showing ST elevation more than lead aVR
Atrial Infarction
In the presence of acute inferior wall myocardial infarction (MI) PRsegment elevation in inferior leads and PR-segment depression in
lead aVR are suggestive of atrial infarction (Figure 5).
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Figure 4: Distal left anterior descending artery disease showing ST-depression in aVR
Figure 5: Atrial infarction showing PR elevation in inferior leads and PR depression in aVR
Arrhythmias
Identification of the presence, configuration of the P wave and
its relation to QRS is of particular importance in the diagnosis of
tachycardia.
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Ventricular Tachycardia
A dissociated negative P wave in lead aVR is especially useful in
the wide QRS tachycardia in diagnosing a ventricular origin of the
arrhythmia.9 In ventricular tachycardia, there is a tall R in lead
aVR (due to caudocranial activation), which is not usually seen in
supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) with aberrancy (Figure 9).
Section 4
Figure 6: Left ventricular aneurysm showing Q, persistent ST elevation in chest leads and tall R in aVR
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Supraventricular Tachycardia
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Section 4
Figure 10: Atrioventricular reciprocating tachycardia due to pre-excitation showing positive retrograde p in aVR resulting in apparent ST elevation
Acute Pericarditis
Lead aVR can also be useful in the patients with suspected acute
pericarditis.13 Two electrocardiographic findings in this lead are of
diagnostic significance, including reciprocal ST-segment depression
and PR-segment elevation. PR-, ST-segment discordance is suggestive
of acute pericarditis where as in acute MI there is PR-, ST-segment
concordance (Figure 12).
Technical Dextrocardia
When the limb placement is wrong (right arm-left arm lead reversal)
it can cause technical dextrocardia in the ECG. Lead aVR will show
positive P and positive QRS but there will be normal progression of
R from V1 to V616 (Figure 14).
Tension Pneumothorax
The electrocardiographic changes are more common in left
pneumothorax, with or without tension, including a right QRS axis
deviation, low QRS voltage, reduced precordial R-wave voltage, and
anterior T-wave inversion.17 Marked PR-segment elevation in inferior
leads and reciprocal PR-segment depression in lead aVR had been
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Figure 11: Left atrial rhythm showing positive P waves in aVR and dome and dart p in V1
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Section 4
Figure 13: Lead aVR showing tall R and positive P in mirror-imaged dextrocardia. Note the progression of R waves in right-sided chest leads
Figure 14: Technical dextrocardia showing positive P and tall R in aVR but normal progression of R waves in left-sided leads
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Figure 15: Acute pulmonary embolism showing ST elevation and terminal R wave in aVR
CONCLUSION
Since its entry in the late 19th century, the ECG has emerged as a
clinical tool, providing valuable diagnostic information in many
situations, which has helped the physician not only in diagnosis
but also to plan appropriate management in acute and chronic
situations. Many physicians are tuned to look at routine things,
but subtle changes in the most neglected lead aVR give a crucial
information in many situations which otherwise is not evident in
the routine leads. So, in addition to routine evaluation of ECG, one
should pay a careful attention to lead avR which provides essential
diagnostic and prognostic informations not only in cardiac situations
but also in many noncardiac situations.20
REFERENCES
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