ECG (electrocardiogram) Flashcards
what does ECG stand for?
electrocardiogram
what does an ECG show?
- records the electrical activity of the heart
- shows the rhythm and rate of your heart
- can indicate future health risks (heart attacks etc)
what are the 3 main aspects of a heartbeat?
1- p wave (atrial depolarisation)
2- QRS complex (ventricular depolarisation)
3- T wave (ventricular repolarisation)
explain the p wave
the p wave is the start of the heartbeat, originates in the SA node (pacemaker of the heart), it shows the atrial depolarisation or the contraction if the atrias (top two chambers of the heart) more positive!!!!
explain the QRS complex
the QRS complex is the ventricular depolarisation (contraction of the ventricles) 0.06-0.12s- more positive!!!!!
explain the T wave
the T wave is the repolarisation the ventricles or the recovery phase- becomes negative!!!!
list the steps that the electrical impulse travels along
1-SA node (natural pacemaker of the heart) 60-100BPM
2-AV node- 40-60BPM
3-Bundle of His- 40-60BPM
4-Left and right bundle branches- 20-40BPM
5-Purkinje fibres- 20-40BPM
how to interpret the ECG?
- check the distance between the R’s (large peak) see if they’re all the same distance apart- check rhythm
- check the p wave is present and upright
- measure the PR interval- 0.12s-0.20s
- measure QRS complex- 0.06-0.12s
- calculate heartbeat- how many large squares in 6 second strip? x0.04s
how many seconds does a large square indicate?
0.20s
how many seconds does a small square indicate?
0.04s
how many small squares are there in one large square?
5 - 0.04 x 5 = 0.2s
How do you tell if there is a normal R wave progression through V1 to V6?
Poor R wave progression refers to the absence of the normal increase in size of the R wave from v1 to v6. In v1 the R wave should be small, the R wave becomes larger throughout the leads from v1 to v6. R wave should be larger than the S wave in lead v4.
Is the width and height of the p wave normal?
The p wave should be roughly 0.12 s, a height of nearly 3mm.