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Practical Electrocardiography - Rate and Rhythm

Practical Electrocardiography - Rate and Rhythm. Scott Ewing, D.O. Cardiology Fellow August 16, 2006. Syllabus. Introduction Axis Determination Atrial Arrhythmias, Bradycardias, and AV Conduction Block Junctional and Broad Complex Tachycardias

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Practical Electrocardiography - Rate and Rhythm

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  1. Practical Electrocardiography- Rate and Rhythm Scott Ewing, D.O. Cardiology Fellow August 16, 2006

  2. Syllabus • Introduction • Axis Determination • Atrial Arrhythmias, Bradycardias, and AV Conduction Block • Junctional and Broad Complex Tachycardias • Myocardial Ischemia and Acute Myocardial Infarction • Conditions Affecting the Left Side of the Heart • Conditions Affecting the Right Side of the Heart • Conditions Not Primarily Affecting the Heart • Exercise Tolerance Testing

  3. Waveform Review

  4. Axis Review

  5. Axis Review

  6. Axis Review

  7. Axis Review

  8. Axis Review

  9. Rate Determination

  10. Rate

  11. Rate?

  12. Rate?

  13. Rate?

  14. Rate?

  15. Rate?

  16. Normal Sinus Rhythm

  17. Normal Sinus Rhythm

  18. Sinus Bradycardia

  19. Sinus Bradycardia • Pathophysiology • Increased vagal tone in athletes • Inferior wall myocardial infarction • Digitalis glycosides, beta-blockers, calcium channel-blocking agents, class I antiarrhythmic agents, amiodarone • Other drugs, toxins, environmental exposure (lithium, paclitaxel, toluene, dimethyl sulfoxide, topical ophthalmic acetylcholine, fentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil, reserpine, clonidine) • Electrolyte disorders • Infection (diphtheria, rheumatic fever,viral myocarditis) • Sleep apnea • Hypoglycemia • Hypothyroidism • Hypothermia • Increased intracranial pressure.

  20. Sinus Bradycardia

  21. Sinus Tachycardia

  22. Sinus Tachycardia • Pathophysiology • Hypoxia • Hypovolemia / Sepsis • Pain • Fever • Anxiety • Hyperthyroidism • PE • Exercise • Drugs (nicotine, caffeine, atropine, salbutamol, cocaine, amphetamines, methamphetamines, ecstasy)

  23. Sinus Tachycardia

  24. 1st Degree AV Block

  25. 1st Degree AV Block • Pathophysiology • PR interval represents time needed for electrical impulse from sinoatrial node to conduct through the atria, AV node, bundle of His, bundle branches, and Purkinje fibers • PR interval prolongation due to conduction delay within the right atrium, the AV node, or the His-Purkinje system • AV nodal dysfunction accounts for the majority of cases • First-degree AV block caused by conduction delay in the His-Purkinje system often is associated with bundle-branch block

  26. 1st Degree AV Block

  27. 2nd Degree Mobitz Type I AV BlockWenckebach phenomenon

  28. Karel Frederik Wenckebach • Attended the University of Utrecht, Netherlands and received his doctorate in 1888 • Spent his assistant period at the institutes of zoology, and for pathological and normal anatomy in Utrecht • 1901 was appointed professor of internal medicine at Groningen, Netherlands • Held the same tenure at Strasbourg , France 1911-1914 • Followed a call to Vienna, Austria, where he retired from his chair in 1929 • Early work concerned embryology, later concentrated his efforts in the study of the pathology and clinics of heart and circulatory diseases • Apart from his well known phenomenon, he wrote one of the first descriptions of the beneficial effects of the quinine alkaloids on arrhythmias and that its successful use was mainly in patients with auricular fibrillation or recent onset (1903-1904) • Wrote an important monograph on beriberi in 1934

  29. 2nd Degree Mobitz Type I AV Block • Pathophysiology • Conduction disturbance in the AV node • Rarely secondary to AV nodal structural abnormalities when the QRS complex is narrow in width and no underlying cardiac disease is present • May be vagally mediated (well-trained athletes, digoxin excess, neurally mediated syncopal syndromes) • Vagally mediated AV block improves with exercise and may occur more commonly during sleep when parasympathetic tone dominates • Cardioactive drugs (digoxin, beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and certain antiarrhythmic drugs) • Various inflammatory, infiltrative, metabolic, endocrine, and collagen vascular disorders

  30. 2nd Degree Mobitz Type I AV Block

  31. 2nd Degree Mobitz Type I AV Block

  32. 2nd Degree Mobitz Type II AV Block • Intermittent failure of conduction of P waves • PR interval is constant (may be normal or prolonged) • May include wide QRS • May progress to complete third degree AV block

  33. 2nd Degree Mobitz Type II AV Block

  34. Woldemar Mobitz • Studied in Freiburg im Breisgau and in Munich, where he obtained his doctorate in 1914 • Hospital service and assistant years in the surgical clinics in Berlin and Halle, as well as the medical clinics in Munich and Freiburg • 1924 he was habilitated for internal medicine in Munich, and in 1928 he became professor extraordinary at Freiburg im Breisgau • Became head physician at the university medical clinic, then director of the medical clinic of the city hospital in Magdeburg • Remained in Magdeburg until it was occupied by the Russian army in 1945 • His main work concerns heart and circulation

  35. 3rd Degree Heart Block

  36. 3rd Degree Heart Block • Pathophysiology • Class Ia antiarrhythmics (eg, quinidine, procainamide, disopyramide) • Class Ic antiarrhythmics (eg, flecainide, encainide, propafenone) • Class II antiarrhythmics (beta-blockers) • Class III antiarrhythmics (eg, amiodarone, sotalol, dofetilide, ibutilide) • Class IV antiarrhythmics (calcium channel blockers) • Digoxin or other cardiac glycosides • Infection • Profound hypervagotonicity • Anterior wall MI • Cardiomyopathy, eg, Lyme carditis and acute rheumatic fever • Metabolic disturbances, eg, severe hyperkalemia

  37. 3rd Degree Heart Block

  38. 3rd Degree Heart Block

  39. Atrial Fibrillation

  40. Atrial Fibrillation • Pathophysiology • Long-standing hypertension • Valvular heart disease (rheumatic) • Left ventricular hypertrophy • Coronary artery disease • Diabetes mellitus • AMI • CHF • Pulmonary embolism • Cardiomyopathy • Pericarditis • Hyperthyroidism • Ethanol use (holiday heart) • Cardiothoracic surgery (postoperative) • Use of illegal drugs, such as cocaine or amphetamine derivatives • Over-the-counter herbs (eg, ephedra, ginseng) • Idiopathic or “Lone” AF

  41. Atrial Fibrillation

  42. Atrial Fibrillation

  43. Atrial Fibrillation

  44. Atrial Fibrillation

  45. Atrial fibrillationwith Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome

  46. Atrial Flutter

  47. Atrial Flutter • Pathophysiology • Long-standing hypertension • Valvular heart disease (rheumatic) • Left ventricular hypertrophy • Coronary artery disease with or without depressed left ventricular function • CHF • Pericarditis • Pulmonary embolism • Hyperthyroidism • Diabetes Mellitus • Postoperative revascularization • Digitalis toxicity

  48. Atrial Flutter

  49. Atrial Flutter

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