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EKGs…The Basics for FP Residents

Learn the essentials of EKG interpretation for family practice residents. Part III focuses on arrhythmias, including guidelines for diagnosing NSR, atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, premature atrial complexes, and more.

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EKGs…The Basics for FP Residents

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  1. EKGs…The Basics for FP Residents Jess Fogler, MD University of California, San Francisco

  2. Part III Arrhythmias

  3. An Approach… Attempt to diagnose NSR: • Start with the rhythm strip • Rate • Regularity • Measure RR interval carefully if rate fast • Check for P wave before every QRS

  4. An Approach… • Check leads I, II, aVF • If P waves upright and consistent morphology: originating from sinus node

  5. An Approach… • If not NSR…evaluate: • Rate • Regularity • Width of QRS complex • Concentrate on finding P waves • V1 most sensitive for P waves • Ps are little “noses” that can deform other waves

  6. Atrial Fibrillation • The most common sustained arrhythmia • Afib: rapid, small amplitude waves that have inconsistent morphology • Best seen in V1-2, or inferior leads

  7. Atrial Fibrillation • Not all irregular rhythms are afib • Irregularly irregular • Aflutter with variable conduction • Multifocal atrial tachycardia • Multiple PAC’s or PVC’s • Regularly irregular • 2° A-V block (type I or II) • Repetitive PVC’s, PJC’s, PAC’s (bigeminy, trigeminy)

  8. Atrial Fibrillation • Organized Afib: fibrillatory waves with peak-to-peak amplitude > 2 mm • Waves can look similar • Examine over several seconds to reveal variations in morphology • Differentiate from aflutter (treatment different)

  9. Atrial Flutter • Continuous regular atrial activity • Re-entrant atrial circuit • Atrial rate 250-350/min • Flutter waves must have identical morphology • subtract for confounding effects of QRS, ST segment, T wave

  10. Atrial Flutter • Classical aflutter (seen in 2/3) • Cover R waves and look for negative waves in II, III, F with rate 250-350 • Atypical flutter • Continuous regular atrial activity at 250-350

  11. Atrial Flutter • Conduction of QRS complexes • 1:1 (rare) • 2:1 (QRS rate ~140-160) most common • 3:1 • Rhythmicity • Regular rhythm most common • Variable conduction possible • irregular rhythm • Can be irregularly irregular • Compare to afib, organized afib

  12. Premature Atrial Complexes • PAC’s are the most common rhythm disturbance • Incidence increases with age • 13% healthy boys • 75% adult males • More common in patients with cardiac disease • Can trigger other arrhythmias • Afib, aflutter • PSVT

  13. Premature Atrial Complexes PAC’s come in three flavors • 1. Premature P wave with normal QRS: • Ectopic atrial focus fires before the sinus node • Different morphology from sinus P wave • Normal QRS when AV node, conduction system repolarized and ready to go.

  14. Premature Atrial Complexes • 2. Premature P wave with no QRS: • P wave occurs very early • between onset of QRS and peak of T wave • Check T’s carefully for deformations • A-V node and bundles in refractory period (ie asleep)

  15. Premature Atrial Complexes • 3. Premature P wave with aberrant ventricular conduction • P wave falls after peak of T wave • A-V node “awake” • Other parts of the conduction system still “asleep” • Commonly has RBBB morphology • RB asleep, LB awake

  16. Premature Atrial Complexes • All PAC’s are followed by a compensatory pause while the sinus node resets • With multiple PAC’s rhythm can become irregularly irregular

  17. Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia • MAT: an irregularly irregular rhythm • P waves with ≥ 3 morphologies per lead • Mean atrial rate >100/min • Variable PR intervals • Non-conducted atrial activity common • Associated with pulmonary disease in 60%

  18. First Degree A-V Block • Prolonged A-V conduction • Atrio-ventricular ratio 1:1 • P-R interval ≥ 210 msec

  19. Type I (Wenckebach): PR prolongation Regularly irregular rhythm (group beating) Constant P-P interval Increase in PR interval (but not necessarily progressive) leading to a… Non-conducted P wave Pause < 2 x RR Next PR interval usually shortest Second Degree A-V Block

  20. Second Degree A-V Block Type II (Mobitz): sudden failure • Constant P-R interval • Constant P-P interval • Dropped beats • Rare • Can progress to asystole, 3˚ A-V block, death • Permanent pacemaker required

  21. Third Degree A-V Block • Complete failure of atrial impulse propagation with independent junctional or ventricular escape rhythm • P waves and QRS complexes have no relation to each other • Usually will see more P waves than QRS complexes

  22. Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia (PSVT) • Atrial rhythm: narrow QRS (usually) • Paroxysmal • Rate 140-250 • AVRT • AVNRT • Atrial tachycardia

  23. Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia (PSVT) • Differentiation between types usually not necessary as treatment for all similar • Unstable patients: DC cardioversion • Stable patients: vagal maneuvers, adenosine, verapamil etc. • Adenosine may reveal flutter waves • ST-T changes are frequent and a poor predictor of underlying CAD (even with chest pain)

  24. Wide QRS Complex Tachycardia • First: is the rhythm regular? • Irregularity easily missed at fast rates • Use calipers or measure with paper • Treatment of irregular WCT different than regular WCT

  25. Wide QRS Complex Tachycardia Irregular rhythm: • Afib with BBB or IVCD (pre-existent or rate related) • Afib with anterograde conduction over accessory pathway in WPW • Other causes of an irregular rhythm (aflutter with variable conduction, MAT etc) with BBB, WPW, IVCD

  26. Wide QRS Complex Tachycardia Regular rhythm: • Ventricular driven rhythm: • Vtach - worst case scenario • Supraventricular rhythm with aberrant conduction: • Sinus tach with BBB (pre-existent or rate related) - most common • SVT (atrial tach, PSVT) with BBB • Antidromic reciprocating tachycardia in WPW

  27. Wide QRS Complex Tachycardia Basic diagnostic algorithm for WCT with regular rhythm: • If QRS complex doesn’t fit the typical pattern of either RBBB or LBBB, the diagnosis defaults to Vtach • Remember that sinus tach with BBB is most common so scrutinize for P waves • When in doubt treat for Vtach

  28. Train your eyes • Train your eyes for Rate: • Check the computer • Train your eyes for Rhythm: • Check the rhythm strip • Check I, II, avF • Train your eyes for Axis: • Check I, II • Train your eyes for Intervals: • PR: check II • QT: check the computer • QRS: check I, V1

  29. Train your eyes • Train your eyes for LVH: • Look at…in order • avL • V3 • V1 • V5,V6 • Check your cheat sheet • Read the computer • Train your eyes for MI: • Look at all T waves • Look at all ST segments • Check for Q waves • Check for R waves in V1-2

  30. Practice Makes perfect

  31. Rate: 250 QTC: 410

  32. Rate: 42 QTC: 375

  33. Rate: 74 QTC: 410

  34. Rate: 150 QTC: 410

  35. Rate: 41 QTC: 360

  36. Rate: 62 QTC: 390

  37. Rate: 114 QTC: 445

  38. Rate: 43 QTC: 440

  39. Rate: 73 QTC: 390

  40. Rate: 42 QTC: 420 I II III

  41. Rate: 71 QTC: 380

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