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level: ECG Basics for Pathology

Questions and Answers List

level questions: ECG Basics for Pathology

QuestionAnswer
What are the disorders in PR interval?Short PR (WPW syndrome - accessory pathway conducting impulse without AV delay called delta-wave)
What is an EKG?Representation of the electrical events in the cardiac events Each event has a distinct wave form Gives an insight into pathophysiology
What can be identified by EKGs?Arrythmias, Myocardial ischemia and infarction, pericarditis, chamber hypertrophy, electrolyte disturbances (hyper/hypokalemia), drug toxicity (digoxin prolongs QT interval)
What are the pacemakers of the heart?SA node (dominant pacemaker, rate 60-100 bpm) AV node (back up, 40-60 bpm) Ventricular cells (back up, 20-45 bpm)
What is the standard calibration of EKG?25mm/s, 0.1 mV/mm If an electrical impulse is going towards the electrode appears positive, if away appears negative.
What do each EKG wave refer to?P wave: atrial depolarization QRS: Ventricular depolarization (and atrial repolarization) T wave: Ventricular repolarization
How is the ECG paper?.
What are the EKG leads?They measure difference in potential between two points, either unipolar or bipolar. 12 leads, 6 limb leads (3 std and 3 augmented) and 6 precordial leads
What are the std limb leads and where are they installed?Right arm, left leg and left arm Lead I (bipolar, RA to LA 0 degrees) Lead II (bipolar RA to LL +60 degrees) Lead III (Bipolar LA to LL +120 degrees)
What are the augmented limb leads and where are they installed?aVR (unipolar, -150 degrees at right arm) aVL (unipolar, -30 degrees at left arm) aVF (unipolar, +90 degrees at left leg)
Where are precordial leads installed?V1 right lower sternum, V2 left lower sternum (septal pulse) V3 between V2 and V4, V4 midclavicular (anterior pulse) V5 between V4 and V6, V6 midaxillary (Lateral pulse)
What are right and posterior leads?right placement like left for dextrocardia Posterior leads (3 cords under the scapulae.
How are the anatomic grouping of EKG leads?.
What are the 10 rules of EKG?1-PR interval between 3-5 little squares (120-200 ms) 2-QRS less than 3 little square (110 ms) 3-QRS positive in leads I and II 4- QRS and T waves have same direction in limb leads 5-aVR all negative 6-R and S grow from V1 to V4 And S disappears in V6 7-ST segment starts isoelectric except V1 and V2 8-P wave upright in I, II and V2-V6 9-No Q or small Q I,II, v2-v6 (1 little square) 10-T wave upright in I, II, V2-V6
How is the P wave?Always positive in I and II and negative in aVR <3 squares duration and 2.5 amplitude Biphasic in V1, best seen in lead II Biphasic (first phase is for right atrial contraction and second is for left atrial contraction)
What are the disorders in P wave?P Pulmonale (right atrial enlargement, pointed p wave and tall >2.5 squares) P Mitrale (left atrial enlargement, bifid p wave)
What is PR interval?It is from the beginning of P till the beginning of QRS Represents atrial depolarization + delay in AV junction which allows time for atria to contract fully before ventricular contraction.
What are the disorders in PR interval?Short PR (WPW syndrome - accessory pathway conducting impulse without AV delay called delta-wave) Long PR (First degree heart block (AV block))
What are QRS complexes characteristics?Q wave nonpatho in I,III, aVL, V5 and V6. R wave in V6 smaller than V5 S wave depth not more than 30mm Patho Q wave if >25% of R wave ampitude
What are the pathologies in QRS wave?Right Ventricular Hypertrophy (V1 less positive R and V6 less negative) Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (V1 more negative and V6 more positive, Sokolow and Lyon criteria: R >11-13mm) Tall R (Right BBB, posterior MI, Type A WPW syndrome, RVH)
What is the ST segment?Between end to QRS and Beginning of T, isoelectric, considered elevated or depressed by 1 mm Elevated in case of Acute MI (AMI_
What is the T wave?Asymmetrical, less that 2/3 of R amplitude follows QRS axis direction
What is an abnormal T wave?abnormal T waves are symmetrical, tall, peaked, biphasic or inverted.
How is the QT interval?It is the duration of depolarization and repolarization. As heart rate increase, QT decrease, should be between 0.35 and 0.45 s and shouldn't exceed more than half of RR interval
What are the U waves?• U wave related to afterdepolarizations which follow repolarization • U waves are small, round, symmetrical and positive in lead II, with amplitude < 2 mm • U wave direction is the same as T wave • More prominent at slow heart rates
How to calculate HR using 300s rule?count big boxes between RR, divide 300 by the number of boxes
How to calculate HR using 10s rule?Count all the waves in the display under and multiply by 6 (for waves that are irregular)
What is the QRS axis?It represents the overall direction of the hearts electrical activity. abnormalities hint at ventricular enlargements and conduction blocks. Normal axis is between -30 deg and +90 deg
What are the abnormal QRS axis?-30 , -90 this is Left axis deviation +90 , +180 this is right axis deviation +180 , -90 this is indeterminate axis
What is the quadrant approach to get the QRS axis?See Leads I (0 degree) and aVF (+90 degree). If both positive -->normal If Lead I negative and aVF positive --> RAD If both negative -->indeterminate If Lead I positive and aVF negative --> check Lead II if Positive normal if negative LAD
What is the equiphasic approach to get the QRS axis?Check the most equiphasic QRS among the limb leads, QRS is the lead 90 degrees away from the most equiphasic, it can be positive or negative