Junctional Rhythms Flashcards
Steps for Interpreting EKG
> Is it regular or irregular?
-look at the P-P (atrial) if present and R-R (ventricular)
> What is the rate?
> Are there P waves?
- do they look the same or are they different?
- is there a P wave in front of every QRS?
> If there are P waves, is there a regular PR interval?
-is it 0.12-0.20 seconds?
> What does the QRS look like?
- narrow (< 0.10)- above ventricles
- wide (> 0.10)- above the ventricles- wide QRS
- wide (> 0.10)- below the ventricles
> What is the QT interval?
- is it between 0.36-0.44 seconds?
- normal QT should be less than half the R-R interval (less than R-R interval is normal, the same it is borderline, and longer it is prolonged)
> Interpretation?
Intervention?
The different junctional rhythms
- Premature junctional complexes (PJCs)
- Junctional Rhythm (40-60 bpm)
- Accelerated Junctional Rhythm (60-100 bpm)
- Junctional Tachycardia (100-180 bom)
> the only difference is the rates
in PJC rate is determined by the underlying rhythm
P wave of the AV junction
- may appear before, during, or after the QRS
- no “p” wave before the QRS or
- inverted “p” wave before the QRS, or
- an inverted “p” wave after the QRS
Premature Junctional Complexes (PJC)
arises from an irritable site within the AV junction that fires before the next expected sinus beat
- Narrow QRS
- PR interval: <0.12
Difference between PACs and PJCs
- the PR interval of a PAC is normal 0.12-0.20
- the PR interval of a PJC is <0.12
ECG characteristics of a PJC
- Regular: except for premature beats
- Rate: depends on underlying rhythm
- P wave: either inverted and before QRS, during QRS w/ no “p” wave, or inverted after the QRS
- PR interval: if “p” wave before QRS it is 0.12 or less; if “p” wave in the QRS or after the QRS there is no PR interval
- QRS complex: 0.10 seconds (wide)
- QT interval: 0.44 or less
How to treat a PJC
- assess patient
- correct the underlying cause
Junctional Rhythm on EKG
- Regular: Yes
- Rate: 40-60 bpm
- P waves: either inverted and before the QRS, during QRS w/ no “p” wave, or inverted after the QRS
- PR interval: if “p” wave before the QRS it will be 0.12 or less; if “p” wave in the QRS or after the QRS there is no PR interval
- QRS complex: 0.10 seconds (wide)
- QT interval: 0.36-0.44 (the lower the rate the longer the QT)
Accelerated Junctional Rhythm
- Regular: Yes
- Rate: 60-100 bpm
- P waves: either inverted and before the QRS, during the QRS w/ no “p”, or inverted and after the QRS
- PR interval: if “p” wave before the QRS it is 0.12 or less; If “p” wave in or after the QRS there is no PR interval
- QRS complex: 0.10 seconds (wide)
- QT interval: 0.36-0.44 seconds (the lower the rate the longer the QT)
Junctional Tachycardia
- Regular: Yes
- Rate: 100-180 bpm
- P waves: either inverted and before QRS, during QRS w/ no “p” wave, or inverted and after the QRS
- PR interval: If “p” wave before QRS it is 0.12 or less, if the “p” wave is in the QRS or after the QRS there is no PR interval
- QRS complex: 0.10 seconds (wide)
- QT interval: 0.44 or less (
- often starts abruptly and is preceded by a PJC
What to do about Junctional Rhythms
- assess patient
- treat if low or high heart rate (HR) is causing symptoms
- identify and treat underlying cause