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ECG LEADS

ECG LEADS. Chapter 3. introduction. The heart produces electrical currents The body acts as a conductor of electricity. introduction. An ECG is a recording of the electrical activity of the heart Different “views” of the heart can be recorded using different electrodes. INtroduction.

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ECG LEADS

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  1. ECG LEADS • Chapter 3

  2. introduction • The heart produces electrical currents • The body acts as a conductor of electricity

  3. introduction • An ECG is a recording of the electrical activity of the heart • Different “views” of the heart can be recorded using different electrodes

  4. INtroduction • Electrodes are able to measure the voltages of the cardiac current

  5. Electrodes

  6. Electrodes • V1: Fourth intercostal space to the right of the sternum. • V2: Fourth intercostal space to the Left of the sternum. • V3: Directly between leads V2 and V4. • V4: Fifth intercostal space at midclavicular line. • V5: Level with V4 at left anterior axillary line. • V6: Level with V5 at left midaxillary line. (Directly under the midpoint of the armpit)

  7. Electrode placement

  8. Electrode and Lead are not the same thing.

  9. Leads • 12 possible leads • Six limb (extremity) leads • Bipolar leads: I, II, and III • Unipolar leads: aVR, aVL, aVF • Six chest (precordial) leads

  10. limb leads • Electrodes • Right arm • Left arm • Left leg • Right leg (ground)

  11. lead i • LA = electrical voltages of the heart that are transmitted to the left arm • RA = electrical voltages of the heart that are transmitted to the right arm • The electrocardiograph sustracts RA from LA and the difference appears as lead I.

  12. lead i • Lead one ‘travels’ horizontally. • Its left pole (LA) is postive and its right pole (RA) is negative. • Therefore, lead I = LA minus RA • Shows a positive wave when an impluses moves towards the left arm, negative wave when an impuse moves away from the left arm.

  13. Lead II • Lead II points downward diagonally • Lower pole (LL) is positive and upper pole (RA) is negative. • Lead II = LL minus RA

  14. Lead III • Lead III points downward diagonally • Lower pole (LL) is positive and upper pole (LA) is negative. • Lead III = LL minus LA

  15. Bipolar Leads

  16. Unipolar or Augmented limb leads • Record the electrical voltages at one location rather than relative to the voltage at another electrode

  17. limb leads • aVR + aVL + aVF = 0

  18. Limb leads • Bipolar leads & Unipolar (or augmented) leads • Frontal plane

  19. Limb leads

  20. chest leads • V1 to V6 • unipolar • horizontal plane • front to back

  21. Chest Leads

  22. ALL 12 leads Frontal Plane Horizontal Plane

  23. Monitor leads • 12 leads are not always necessary • Sample of a monitor lead • V1 (positive) • Right shoulder (negative) • Left shoulder (ground)

  24. Holter Monitors

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