AV Blocks Lecture Flashcards
AV Block
A block in the cardiac conduction system that causes a disruption of atrial‐to‐ ventricular electrical conduction
First degree AV Block
prolongs AV node conduction
P wave precedes QRS complex
PR interval more than 0.2 sec (5 boxes or 1 large square)
etiology of 1st degree AV Block
Normal variant
- Presence of atherosclerosis, HTN, DM enhances chances
- Degeneration of conduction system/fibrosis congenital heart disease
- CAD - ischemia
- Drugs - BB, CCB, digitalis, antiarrhythmias (Class 1&3)
- Endocrine - hypothyroid, hyperthyroid, adrenal insufficiency
- Inflammatory - RF, SLE, MCTD, myocarditis
- Infiltrative - Amyloidosis, sarcoid, hemochromatosis
- Valvular calcification - mitral, aortic
2nd degree AV Block - Mobitz I (Wencke Bach)
- progressive PR-interval prolongation prior to dropped QRS due to earlier arrival in relative refractory period of AV conduction
- Impairment of AV conduction (AV node)
- Transient
- “Grouped beats”
- Seen in inferior AMI
- Level of block is at level of AV node
- Narrow QRS complex
Etiology of Mobitz I
Causes of 1st degree AV block
Digitalis toxicity
Ischemic events (MI-inferior)
Myocarditis
Etiology of 2nd degree AV Block - Mobitz II
Ischemic heart disease
Acute ANTERIOR MI
Degeneration of conduction system
2nd degree AV Block - Mobitz II
PR interval uniform Dropped Beat (QRS) - P wave fails to conduct
Block occurs at the level of:
Bundle of HIS
Both bundle branches
Fascicular branches
Progressive/irreversible
May be seen with ANTERIOR AMI because block is distal to AV node - worse prognosis
3rd Degree Heart Block (Complete Heart Block)
P waves never related to QRS complexes
2 independent rhythms
-AV Dissociation - no P waves conduct to the ventricle
Can occur above or below AV node
Above: Junctional rhythm - narrow QRS (rate 40-55)
Below: Ventricular pacemaker - wide QRS (rate 20-40)
Etiology of 3rd degree Heart block
Ischemic Infiltrative diseases Cardiac surgery: -By-pass, vlave replacement -myocarditis -degenerative
Treatment for 3rd degree AV block
pacemaker
What to check on every ECG
PR Interval:
- increased consistently in 1st degree AV block
- Progressively increases in each series of cycles with Wenckebach
- Totally variable in 3rd degree AV block
- Decreased in WPW and LGL syndromes
P without QRS response:
- Wenckebach and Mobitz 2 AV blocks
- 3rd degree AV block - independent