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EKG Interpretation

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EKG Interpretation. UNC Emergency Medicine Medical Student Lecture Series. Objectives. The Basics Interpretation Clinical Pearls Practice Recognition. The Normal Conduction System. Lead Placement. aVF. All Limb Leads. Precordial Leads. EKG Distributions. Anteroseptal: V1, V2, V3, V4 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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EKG Interpretation UNC Emergency Medicine Medical Student Lecture Series
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Page 1: EKG Interpretation

EKG Interpretation

UNC Emergency MedicineMedical Student Lecture

Series

Page 2: EKG Interpretation

Objectives The Basics Interpretation Clinical Pearls Practice

Recognition

Page 3: EKG Interpretation

The Normal Conduction System

Page 4: EKG Interpretation

Lead Placement

aVF

Page 5: EKG Interpretation

All Limb Leads

Page 6: EKG Interpretation

Precordial Leads

Page 7: EKG Interpretation

EKG Distributions Anteroseptal: V1, V2, V3,

V4 Anterior: V1–V4 Anterolateral: V4–V6, I,

aVL Lateral: I and aVL Inferior: II, III, and aVF Inferolateral: II, III, aVF,

and V5 and V6

Page 8: EKG Interpretation

Waveforms

Page 9: EKG Interpretation

Interpretation Develop a systematic approach to

reading EKGs and use it every time The system we will practice is:

Rate Rhythm (including intervals and

blocks) Axis Hypertrophy Ischemia

Page 10: EKG Interpretation

Rate Rule of 300- Divide 300 by the

number of boxes between each QRS = rate

Number of big boxes

Rate

1 300

2 150

3 100

4 75

5 60

6 50

Page 11: EKG Interpretation

Rate HR of 60-100 per minute is normal HR > 100 = tachycardia HR < 60 = bradycardia

Page 12: EKG Interpretation

Differential Diagnosis of Tachycardia

Tachycardia

Narrow Complex

Wide Complex

Regular STSVTAtrial flutter

ST w/ aberrancySVT w/ aberrancy

VT

Irregular A-fibA-flutter w/ variable conductionMAT

A-fib w/ aberrancy

A-fib w/ WPWVT

Page 13: EKG Interpretation

What is the heart rate?

(300 / 6) = 50 bpm

www.uptodate.com

Page 14: EKG Interpretation

Rhythm Sinus

Originating from SA node

P wave before every QRS

P wave in same direction as QRS

Page 15: EKG Interpretation

What is this rhythm?Normal sinus rhythm

Page 16: EKG Interpretation

Normal Intervals PR

0.20 sec (less than one large box)

QRS 0.08 – 0.10 sec (1-2

small boxes) QT

450 ms in men, 460 ms in women

Based on sex / heart rate

Half the R-R interval with normal HR

Page 17: EKG Interpretation

Prolonged QT Normal

Men 450ms Women 460ms

Corrected QT (QTc) QTm/√(R-R)

Causes Drugs (Na channel blockers) Hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia, hypokalemia Hypothermia AMI Congenital Increased ICP

Page 18: EKG Interpretation

Blocks AV blocks

First degree block PR interval fixed and > 0.2 sec

Second degree block, Mobitz type 1 PR gradually lengthened, then drop QRS

Second degree block, Mobitz type 2 PR fixed, but drop QRS randomly

Type 3 block PR and QRS dissociated

Page 19: EKG Interpretation

What is this rhythm?

First degree AV block PR is fixed and longer than 0.2 sec

Page 20: EKG Interpretation

What is this rhythm?

Type 1 second degree block (Wenckebach)

Page 21: EKG Interpretation

What is this rhythm?

Type 2 second degree AV block Dropped QRS

Page 22: EKG Interpretation

What is this rhythm?

3rd degree heart block (complete)

Page 23: EKG Interpretation

The QRS Axis

Represents the overall direction of the heart’s activity

Axis of –30 to +90 degrees is normal

Page 24: EKG Interpretation

The Quadrant Approach QRS up in I and up in aVF =

Normal

Page 25: EKG Interpretation

What is the axis?

Normal- QRS up in I and aVF

Page 26: EKG Interpretation

Hypertrophy Add the larger S wave of V1 or V2

in mm, to the larger R wave of V5 or V6.

Sum is > 35mm = LVH

Page 27: EKG Interpretation

Ischemia Usually indicated by ST changes

Elevation = Acute infarction Depression = Ischemia

Can manifest as T wave changes Remote ischemia shown by q

waves

Page 28: EKG Interpretation

What is the diagnosis?

Acute inferior MI with ST elevation in leads II, III, aVF

Page 29: EKG Interpretation

What do you see in this EKG?

ST depression II, III, aVF, V3-V6 = ischemia

Page 30: EKG Interpretation

Let’s PracticeThe sample EKGs were obtained from the following text:

Page 31: EKG Interpretation

Normal Sinus Rhythm

Mattu, 2003

Page 32: EKG Interpretation

First Degree Heart Block

PR interval >200ms

Page 33: EKG Interpretation

Accelerated Idioventricular

Ventricular escape rhythm, 40-110 bpm

Seen in AMI, a marker of reperfusion

Page 34: EKG Interpretation

Junctional Rhythm

Rate 40-60, no p waves, narrow complex QRS

Page 35: EKG Interpretation

Hyperkalemia

Tall, narrow and symmetric T waves

Page 36: EKG Interpretation

Wellen’s Sign

ST elevation and biphasic T wave in V2 and V3Sign of large proximal LAD lesion

Page 37: EKG Interpretation

Brugada Syndrome

RBBB or incomplete RBBB in V1-V3 with convex ST elevation

Page 38: EKG Interpretation

Brugada Syndrome Autosomal dominant genetic

mutation of sodium channels Causes syncope, v-fib, self

terminating VT, and sudden cardiac death

Can be intermittent on EKG Most common in middle-aged males Can be induced in EP lab Need ICD

Page 39: EKG Interpretation

Premature Atrial Contractions

Trigeminy pattern

Page 40: EKG Interpretation

Atrial Flutter with Variable Block

Sawtooth wavesTypically at HR of 150

Page 41: EKG Interpretation

Torsades de Pointes

Notice twisting pattern

Treatment: Magnesium 2 grams IV

Page 42: EKG Interpretation

Digitalis

Dubin, 4th ed. 1989

Page 43: EKG Interpretation

Lateral MI

Reciprocal changes

Page 44: EKG Interpretation

Inferolateral MI

ST elevation II, III, aVF

ST depression in aVL, V1-V3 are reciprocal changes

Page 45: EKG Interpretation

Anterolateral / Inferior Ischemia

LVH, AV junctional rhythm, bradycardia

Page 46: EKG Interpretation

Left Bundle Branch Block

Monophasic R wave in I and V6, QRS > 0.12 secLoss of R wave in precordial leadsQRS T wave discordance I, V1, V6Consider cardiac ischemia if a new finding

Page 47: EKG Interpretation

Right Bundle Branch Block

V1: RSR prime pattern with inverted T waveV6: Wide deep slurred S wave

Page 48: EKG Interpretation

First Degree Heart Block, Mobitz Type I (Wenckebach)

PR progressively lengthens until QRS drops

Page 49: EKG Interpretation

Supraventricular Tachycardia

Narrow complex, regular; retrograde P waves, rate <220

Retrograde P waves

Page 50: EKG Interpretation

Right Ventricular Myocardial Infarction

Found in 1/3 of patients with inferior MI

Increased morbidity and mortality

ST elevation in V4-V6 of Right-sided EKG

Page 51: EKG Interpretation

Ventricular Tachycardia

Page 52: EKG Interpretation

Prolonged QT

QT > 450 ms

Inferior and anterolateral ischemia

Page 53: EKG Interpretation

Second Degree Heart Block, Mobitz Type II

PR interval fixed, QRS dropped intermittently

Page 54: EKG Interpretation

Acute Pulmonary Embolism

SIQIIITIII in 10-15%

T-wave inversions, especially occurring in inferior and anteroseptal simultaneously

RAD

Page 55: EKG Interpretation

Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome

Short PR interval <0.12 secProlonged QRS >0.10 secDelta waveCan simulate ventricular hypertrophy, BBB and previous MI

Page 56: EKG Interpretation

Hypokalemia

U wavesCan also see PVCs, ST depression, small T waves

Page 57: EKG Interpretation
Page 58: EKG Interpretation

Thank You

Any Questions?


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