S7) ECG Abnormalities Flashcards
What are the causes for abnormal rhythms?
- Abnormal impulse formation
- Abnormal conduction
What are the two types of abnormal rhythms?
- Supraventricular rhythms (SAN, Atrium, AVN)
- Ventricular rhythms
Describe 3 features of supraventricular rhythms
- Conducts impulse into and within ventricles by His-Purkinje system
- Normal ventricular depolarisation
- Normal QRS complexes (narrow)
Describe 4 features of ventricular rhythms
- Impulses arise from a focus/foci in ventricle
- Conduction not via usual His-Purkinje system
- Depolarisation takes longer
- Wide/bizarre QRS complexes
What is the best way to interpret rhythm from an ECG?
- Look at the ‘rhythm strip’ at the bottom of 12 lead ECG
- Some machines record Lead II, V1 and V5 rhythm strips
What is atrial fibrillation?
- Atrial fibrillation is a condition where impulse arise from multiple atrial foci, leading to chaotic atrial depolarisation wherein atria quiver rather than contract
- It carries risk of thrombosis
In 4 steps, explain the electrical activity in atrial fibrillation
⇒ Chaotic impulses from multiple atrial foci
⇒ Impulses arrive at AVN at rapid irregular rate
⇒ Only some conducted to ventricles (at regular intervals)
⇒ Ventricles depolarise and contract normally
What are two characteristic features of atrial fibrillation?
- No p waves (wavy baseline)
- Pulse and heart rate irregularly irregular
What are AV conduction blocks?
A heart block is a delay/ failure of conduction impulses from the atrium to the ventricles via the AVN and bundle of His
What are the causes of AV conduction blocks?
- Acute myocardial infarction (commonest)
- Degenerative changes
What are the three different types of AV conduction blocks?
- First degree heart block
- Second degree heart block
- Complete Heart Block
What are the characteristic features of first degree heart block (1o HB)?
- P wave normal
- QRS normal
- PR interval prolong > 5 small squares (slow conduction in AV and Bundle of His)
What are the characteristic features of Mobitz Type I (2o HB)?
- Progressive lengthening of PR interval
- Until one P is not conducted (this allows time for AVN to recover),
- Cycle begins again
What are the characteristic features of Mobitz Type II (2o HB)?
- PR interval normal
- Sudden non-conduction of a beat
- Dropped QRS
- High risk of progression to complete heart block
What causes complete heart block?
- Normal atrial depolarisation but impulses not conducted to ventricle
- Ventricular pacemaker takes over (ventricular escape rhythm)