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Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease “” Investigation of cardiovascular disease “”(Printed by Mostafa Hatim) Electrocardiogram (ECG) The ECG is used to: - Assess cardiac rhythm (e.g. arrhythmia) and conduction. - It provides information about chamber size (e.g. left ventricular hypertrophy) and is the - Main test used to assess myocardial ischaemia & infarction. - Also give information about pulmonary circulation The standard 12-lead ECG Normal ECG morphology ECG paper = 6 seconds = 30 large boxes = 150 small boxes 87 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 88 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 89 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease Systematic interpretation guidelines for ECG Normally S wave disappear in aVL, Lead I Q wave appear only in aVL, V5 & V6 1) Look for standardization & Lead aVR 2) Rate Our first method is simple. Count the number of QRS complexes over a 6 second interval. Multiple by 10 to determine heart rate. This method works well for both regular and irregular rhythms.. 90 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease The second method uses small boxes. Count the number of small boxes for a typical RR interval. Divide this number into 1500 to determine heart rate.. HR= 60-90 beat/min 3) Rhythm o Features of sinus rhythm are: - Each P wave should be followed by QRS complex. - P-R interval should be normal & constant. - P wave morphology should be normal. - R-R interval should be equal, if it is irregular, then it is called irregular rhythm o Causes of irregular rhythm 1) Regularly irregular A. Sinus arrhythmia (Physiological). Sinus tachycardia (>150). Sinus bradycardia (<60) B. 2nd degree (Wenkenbach) heart block (Pathological): suggested by: regular rate with regular dropped beat. Confirmed by: ECG showing progressive prolongation of PR interval with normal QRS complex followed by an absent QRS complex 2) Irregularly irregular (Pathological) A. Atrial fibrillation → absent P wave in lead II B. Ventricular fibrillation C. Atrial or ventricular (bizarre shape) ectopic beat: suggested by: regular rate with irregular dropped beat. Confirmed by: ECG showing normal sinus rhythm with irregular QRS complexes not proceeded by P wave, and then compensatory absence of subsequent QRS. D. Atrial flutter with variable heart block might also present with an irregularly irregular pulse. Suggested by: irregularly irregular pulse. Confirmed by: ECG showing 'saw tooth' pattern, and irregularly irregular normal QRS complexes 91 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 4) Axis Look at lead I & Lead aVF for electrical axis of the heart. In both these leads, normally, QRS complex is upwards. Normal Axis = QRS axis between -30 and +90 degrees. Left Axis Deviation = QRS axis less than -30 degrees. Right Axis Deviation = QRS axis greater than +90 degrees. Extreme Axis Deviation = QRS axis between -90 and 180 degrees (AKA “Northwest Axis”). 92 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 93 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 5) P wave morphology o Is best appreciated in Lead II & contrast in Lead V1. o Amplitude is normally 0.05-0.25mV (0.5 to 2.5 small boxes). P-wave questions: Are they present? Do they occur regularly? Is there one P-wave for each QRS complex? Are the P-Waves smooth, rounded, and upright? Do all P-Waves have similar shapes? o Inverted P wave: are found when the pacing or the initial impulse originates at or below the AV node. Therefore, depolarization wave of the atrium will spread in a retrograde manner causing inverted P wave. Inverted P wave indicates nodal rhythm or junctional rhythm & idioventricular rhythm. 94 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 6) o o 1) 2) 3) o P-R interval It indicates AV conduction time. It is best appreciated in rhythm strip. Short P-R interval (˂ 0.11 seconds or 3 mm) Retrograde junctional P wave Lown Ganong-Levine syndrome (L-G-L) Wolff-Parkinson-White pattern & syndrome (WPW) Prolonged P-R interval (˃ 0.20 seconds or 5 mm) AV block 1) 1st degree AV block: PR ˃ 0.20 seconds & remains constant from beat to beat. 2) 2nd degree AV block a. Mobitz type I block (Wenckebach phenomena): There is progressive lengthening of PR followed by a drop beat. b. Mobitz type II block: There is no progressive lengthening of PR followed by a drop beat. 3) 3rd degree AV block: Here P wave has no relation to QRS complex. It always has more P waves than QRS complex. 95 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 7) QRS complex QRS questions: - Does the QRS interval -Wide or narrow? - Does QRS High or low voltage? (right ventricular hypertrophy, left ventricular hypertrophy) - Are the QRS complexes similar in appearance across the ECG tracing? Ectopics 96 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 97 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 8) ST segment & T wave abnormality o The ST segment represents the early part of ventricular repolarization. The ST segment is the line that from the end of the QRS complex to beginning of the T wave. Normally, ST segment is flat, being neither +ve or -ve relative to baseline. o The T wave indicates the repolarization of the ventricles. It is a slightly asymmetrical waveform which follows , the QRS complex. Either positive (up) or negative (down)? o Notes 1) Elevation of ST segment indicates zone of injury, diagnosis is supported by reciprocal changes, ST depression in the leads facing the opposite wall. 2) ST elevation > 1mm from baseline in limb leads & > 2mm in chest leads in 2 or more leads facing same area is pathological 3) Inverted T wave indicates effect of ischemia surroundings. 4) Pathological Q wave > 1/3 the total height of the QRS & width > 0.03 seconds, indicates zone of infarction or dead ms. 98 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 9) OT interval It represents the time of ventricular activity including both depolarization and repolarization. It is measured from the beginning of the QRS complex to the end of the T wave. The QT interval will vary with patient gender, age and heart rate. 99 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 10) Hypertrophy 100 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease 11) Bundle branch block 101 Chapter 5 – Cardiovascular disease Exercise (stress) ECG Is used to detect myocardial ischaemia during physical stress and is helpful in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. A 12-lead ECG is recorded during exercise on a treadmill or bicycle ergometer. The limb electrodes are placed on the shoulders & hips rather than the wrists and ankles. The Bruce Protocol is the most commonly used protocol for treadmill testing. BP is recorded & symptoms assessed throughout test. A test is ‘positive’ if anginal pain occurs, BP falls or fails to increase, or if there are ST segment shifts of > 1 mm. Exercise testing is useful in confirming the diagnosis in patients with suspected angina, and in such patients has good sensitivity and specificity. False negative results can occur in patients with coronary artery disease, and some patients with a positive test will not have coronary disease (false positive). Exercise testing is an unreliable population screening tool because in low-risk individuals (e.g. asymptomatic young or middle-aged women) an abnormal response is more likely to represent a false positive than a true positive test. Stress testing is contraindicated in presence of acute coronary syndrome, decompensated heart failure & severe hypertension. Ambulatory ECG Continuous (ambulatory) ECG recordings can be obtained using a portable digital recorder. These devices usually provide limb lead ECG recordings only, and can record for between 1&7 days. Ambulatory ECG recording is principally used in the investigation of patients with suspected arrhythmia, such as those with intermittent palpitation, dizziness or syncope. For these patients, a 12-lead ECG provides only a snapshot of the cardiac rhythm and is unlikely to detect an intermittent arrhythmia, so a longer period of recording is useful. These devices can also be used to assess rate control in patients with atrial fibrillation, and are sometimes used to detect transient myocardial ischaemia using ST segment analysis. For patients with more infrequent symptoms, small patient-activated ECG recorders can be issued for several weeks until a symptom episode occurs. The patient places the device on the chest to record the rhythm during the episode. With some devices the recording can be transmitted to the hospital via telephone. Implantable ‘loop recorders’ are small devices that resemble a leadless pacemaker and are implanted subcutaneously. They have a lifespan of 1–3 years and are used to investigate patients with infrequent but potentially serious symptoms, such as syncope. Cardiac biomarkers Plasma or serum biomarkers can be measured to assess myocardial dysfunction & ischaemia. Brain natriuretic peptide: This is a 32 amino acid peptide & is secreted by the LV along with an inactive 76 amino acid N-terminal fragment (NT-proBNP). The latter is diagnostically more useful, as it has a longer half-life. It is elevated principally in conditions associated with left ventricular systolic dysfunction and may aid the diagnosis and assess prognosis and response to therapy in patients with heart failure. Cardiac troponins Troponin I & troponin T are structural cardiac muscleproteins that are released during myocyte damage and necrosis, and represent the cornerstone of the diagnosis of acute 102