ECG EKG: Basics
ECG EKG: Basics
ECG EKG: Basics
BASICS
EKG
ECG
• The ECG records the electrical signal of the heart as the muscle
cells depolarize (contract) and repolarize.
• Normally, the SA Node generates the initial electrical impulse
and begins the cascade of events that results in a heart beat.
• Recall that cells resting have a negative charge with respect to
exterior and depolarization consists of positive ions rushing into
the cell
HISTORY
• 1842- Italian scientist Carlo Matteucci realizes that electricity
is associated with the heart beat.
Restoration of
Depol Repol. ionic balance
Propagating Activation Wavefront
Depol. away from positive electrode Repol. Away from positive electrode
Negative Signal Positive Signal
The Normal Conduction System
ECG Signal
• The excitation begins at the sinus
(SA) node and spreads along the
atrial walls
• The resultant electric vector is
shown in yellow
• Cannot propagate across the
boundary between atria and
ventricle
• The projections on Leads I, II and
III are all positive
ECG Signal
• Atrioventricular (AV) node located
on atria/ventricle boundary and
provides conducting path
• Depolarization front
continues to propagate to the
back of the left ventricular
wall
Ti
Depolarization of the
right and left atria
Septal
depolarization "after depolarizations" in
the ventricles
Wave definition
• P wave
• Q wave – first downward deflection after
P wave
• Rwave – first upward deflection after Q
wave
• R` wave – any second upward
deflection
• S wave – first downward deflection
after the R wave
ECG Waves and Intervals:
P wave : the sequential activation (depolarization) of the right and left atria
QRS complex : right and left ventricular depolarization (normally the ventricles are activated
simultaneously
U wave : origin for this wave is not clear - but probably represents "after
depolarizations" in the ventricles
• P Wave
The QRS represents the simultaneous activation of the right and left
ventricles, although most of the QRS waveform is derived from the
larger left ventricular musculature. QRS duration < 0.10 sec
QRS amplitude is quite variable from lead to lead and from person to
person. Two determinates of QRS voltages are:
Size of the ventricular chambers (i.e., the larger the chamber, the
larger the voltage)
U waves are more prominent at slow heart rates and usually best seen
in the right precordial leads.
5. ECG Interpretation
Interpret the ECG as "Normal", or "Abnormal".
example : Inferior MI, probably acute
Old anteroseptal MI
Left anterior fascicular block (LAFB)
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH)
Nonspecific ST-T wave abnormalities
Any rhythm abnormalities
ECG- Heart rate
• ECG paper moves at a standardized
25mm/sec
• Each large square is 5 mm
• Each large square is 0.2 sec
• 300 large squares per minute / 1500
small squares per minute
• 300 divided by number of large squares
between R-R
• 1500 divided by number of small
squares between R-R
1. Measurements (Normal)
Heart Rate: 60 - 90 bpm
PR Interval: 0.12 - 0.20 sec
QRS Duration: 0.06 - 0.10 sec
QT Interval (QTc < 0.40 sec)
Poor Man's Guide to upper limits of QT:
For HR = 70 bpm, QT<0.40 sec;
for every 10 bpm increase above 70 subtract 0.02 sec, and
for every 10 bpm decrease below 70 add 0.02 sec.
For example: QT < 0.38 @ 80 bpm
QT < 0.42 @ 60 bpm
Interpretation
• Option 1
– Count the # of R waves in a 6 second
rhythm strip, then multiply by 10.
– Reminder: all rhythm strips in the Modules
are 6 seconds in length.
Interpretation? 9 x 10 = 90 bpm
Step 1: Calculate Rate
R
wave
• Option 2
– Find a R wave that lands on a bold line.
– Count the # of large boxes to the next R
wave. If the second R wave is 1 large box
away the rate is 300, 2 boxes - 150, 3
boxes - 100, 4 boxes - 75, etc. (cont)
Step 2: Determine regularity
R R
• A re-entrant
pathway occurs
when an impulse
loops and results
in self-
perpetuating
impulse
formation.
Atrial Cell Problems
Atrial cells can also:
• fire continuously Atrial Fibrillation
from multiple foci
or
fire continuously Atrial Fibrillation
due to multiple
micro re-entrant
“wavelets”
Teaching Moment
Atrial tissue
Multiple micro re-
entrant “wavelets”
refers to wandering
small areas of
activation which
generate fine chaotic
impulses. Colliding
wavelets can, in turn,
generate new foci of
activation.
AV Junctional Problems
• Sinus Rhythms
• Premature Beats
• Supraventricular Arrhythmias
• Ventricular Arrhythmias
• AV Junctional Blocks
Sinus Rhythms
• Sinus Bradycardia
• Sinus Tachycardia
Sinus Bradycardia
• Rate? 30 bpm
• Regularity? regular
• P waves? normal
• PR interval? 0.12 s
• QRS duration? 0.10 s
Interpretation? Sinus Bradycardia
Sinus Bradycardia
• Rate? 70 bpm
• Regularity? occasionally irreg.
• P waves? 2/7 different contour
• PR interval? 0.14 s (except 2/7)
• QRS duration? 0.08 s
Interpretation? NSR with Premature Atrial
Contractions
Premature Atrial Contractions
• Rate? 60 bpm
• Regularity? occasionally irreg.
• P waves? none for 7th QRS
• PR interval? 0.14 s
• QRS duration? 0.08 s (7th wide)
Interpretation? Sinus Rhythm with 1 PVC
PVCs
Normal Abnormal
Signal moves rapidly Signal moves slowly
through the ventricles through the ventricles
QRS Axis
Determination
The QRS Axis
The QRS axis represents the net overall
direction of the heart’s electrical activity.
disturbances
Measurement abnormality
PR Interval
PR Interval
Normal: 0.12 - 0.20s
LGL (Lown-Ganong-Levine): An AV nodal bypass track into the His bundle exists,
and this permits early activation of the ventricles without a delta-wave because
the ventricular activation sequence is normal.
Short PR Interval
AV Junctional Rhythms
with retrograde atrial activation (inverted P waves in II, III, aVF):
Retrograde P waves may occur before the QRS complex (usually with
a short PR interval), in the QRS complex (i.e., hidden from view), or
after the QRS complex (i.e., in the ST segment).
Normal variant
Prolonged PR: >0.20s
First degree AV block
(PR interval usually constant) Intra-atrial conduction delay
(uncommon)
Slowed conduction in AV node (most common site)
Slowed conduction in His bundle (rare)
Slowed conduction in bundle branch (when contralateral bundle is
blocked)
AV dissociation:
Some PR's may appear prolonged, but the P waves and QRS
complexes are dissociated
1st Degree AV Block
• Rate? 60 bpm
• Regularity? regular
• P waves? normal
• PR interval? 0.36 s
• QRS duration? 0.08 s
Interpretation? 1st Degree AV Block
2nd Degree AV Block, Type I
• Rate? 50 bpm
• Regularity? regularly irregular
• P waves? nl, but 4th no QRS
• PR interval? lengthens
• QRS duration? 0.08 s
Interpretation? 2nd Degree AV Block, Type I
Type I (Mobitz)- 2nd degree AV
block
Type I vs. Type II 2nd Degree AV Block
In type I 2nd degree AV block the PR progressively lenthens until a nonconducted P wave
occurs
The PR gets longer by smaller and smaller increments; this results in gradual shortening of
the RR intervals. RR interval after the pause is longer.
In type II AV block, the PR is constant until the nonconducted P wave occurs. The RR
interval of the pause is usually 2x the basic RR interval.
2nd Degree AV Block, Type II
(Mobitz)
X X X 2X
Rate: None
Rhythm: None
P Waves: None
PR Interval: None
QRS: None
Bundle Branch
Blocks
Bundle Branch Blocks
Turning our attention to bundle branch blocks…
Remember normal
impulse conduction is
SA node
AV node
Bundle of His
Bundle Branches
Purkinje fibers
Normal Impulse Conduction
Sinoatrial node
AV node
Bundle of His
Bundle Branches
Purkinje fibers
Bundle Branch Blocks
So, depolarization of
the Bundle Branches
and Purkinje fibers are
seen as the QRS
complex on the ECG.
Therefore, a conduction
block of the Bundle
Branches would be Right
reflected as a change in BBB
the QRS complex.
Bundle Branch Blocks
With Bundle Branch Blocks you will see two changes
on the ECG.
1. QRS complex widens (> 0.12 sec).
2. QRS morphology changes (varies depending on ECG lead,
and if it is a right vs. left bundle branch block).
Bundle Branch Blocks
Why does the QRS complex widen?
V1
“Rabbit Ears”
Left Bundle Branch Blocks
What QRS morphology is characteristic?
For LBBB the wide QRS complex assumes a
characteristic change in shape in those leads
opposite the left ventricle (right ventricular
leads - V1 and V2).
Broad,
Normal deep S
waves
Left Anterior Fascicular Block (LAFB)
LAFB is best seen in the frontal plane leads as evidenced by left axis
deviation (-50 degrees), rS complexes in II, III, aVF,and the small q in
leads I and/or aVL.
Supraventricular
and
Ventricular
Arrhythmias
Arrhythmias
• Sinus Rhythms
• Premature Beats
• Supraventricular Arrhythmias
• Ventricular Arrhythmias
• AV Junctional Blocks
PREMATURE VENTRICULAR
CONTRACTION (PVC)
•
A single impulse originates at right ventricle
•
• Time interval between normal R peaks
is a multiple of R-R intervals
Supraventricular Arrhythmias
• Atrial Fibrillation
• Atrial Flutter
• Paroxysmal Supraventricular
Tachycardia
Atrial Fibrillation
ATRIAL FIBRILLATION
Impuses have chaotic, random pathways in
atria
Atrial Fibrillation
• Rate? 70 bpm
• Regularity? regular
• P waves? flutter waves
• PR interval? none
• QRS duration? 0.06 s
Interpretation? Atrial Flutter
PSVT - Paroxysmal
Supraventricular Tachycardia
• Ventricular Tachycardia
• Ventricular Fibrillation
Ventricular Tachycardia
• Rate? none
• Regularity? irregularly irreg.
• P waves? none
• PR interval? none
• QRS duration? wide, if recognizable
Interpretation? Ventricular Fibrillation
ST Elevation
and
non-ST Elevation MIs
Myocardial Ischemia and
Infarction
• Oxygen depletion to heart
can cause an oxygen debt in
the muscle (ischemia)
• If oxygen supply stops, the
heart muscle dies (infarction)
• The infarct area is electrically
silent and represents an
inward facing electric
vector…can locate with ECG
ECG Changes
Ways the ECG can change include:
ST elevation &
depression
T-waves
Non-ST Elevation
There are two
distinct patterns
of ECG change
depending if the
infarction is: ST Elevation
Question:
What ECG
changes do
you see?
ST elevation
and Q-waves
Extra credit:
What is the
rhythm? Atrial fibrillation (irregularly irregular with narrow QRS)!
Non-ST Elevation Infarction
Here’s an ECG of an inferior MI later in time:
Now what do
you see in the
inferior leads?
ST elevation,
Q-waves and
T-wave
inversion
Non-ST Elevation Infarction
The ECG changes seen with a non-ST elevation infarction are:
Question:
What area of
the heart is
infarcting?
Anterolateral
Atrial & Ventricular
Hypertrophy
Atrial Hypertropy: Enlarged Atria
RIGHT ATRIAL HYPERTROPHY LEFT ATRIAL HYPERTROPHY
Tall, peaked P wave in leads I and II Wide, notched P wave in lead II
Diphasic P wave in V1
Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
Compare these two 12-lead ECGs. What stands
out as different with the second one?
widening
tall, pointed,
of QRS narrow T waves
LBBB complexes
Hypokalaemia
• ST segment depression,
decreased T wave amplitude,
increased U wave height.(common)
• Cardiac arrhythmias
Hypokalaemia, hypomagnesaemia
and hypercalcaemia aggravate
digitalis toxicity
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