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CLINICAL SKILLS UNIT EDUCATIONAL LOOPS BY Centre of Medical Education Acknowledgements This Teaching e-loop is based on information and material downloaded from the Queen’s University School of Medicine website, http://meds.queensu.ca/courses/assets/modules/tsecg/ and information from MacLeod’s Clinical Examination, Eleventh and tenth editions. These sources are freely acknowledged and recommended to all out students. OBJECTIVES 1 1. Identify the waves and segments of an ECG and relate the physiology of the wave generation correctly (e.g., ventricular depolarization) 2. Describe, define with data and recognise the ECG patterns of right and left ventricular hypertrophy and explain how the changes occur OBJECTIVES 2 3. Using the Queen’s University information describe the electrical axis shown on an ECG with a brief explanation 4. Describe the typical changes seen on an ECG strip with myocardial ischaemia, after an acute MI and a longer period after an MI VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY Ventricular hypertrophy occurs when there is extra strain on the heart due to increased afterload. Afterload is the resistance that needs to be overcome for the ventricle to eject blood out through the aortic or pulmonary valves. Therefore the two commonest causes are: Hypertension And Aortic stenosis Right ventricular hypertrophy is unusual! VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY The more muscle there is in a ventricle the larger the current generated upon depolarization, and on an ECG recording the heart’s axis shifts towards the hypertrophied side (for example, right ventricle hypertrophy – right axis deviation). Therefore normally the left ventricle dominates and the QRS complex dominates over the left ventricle seen best in V5 and V6. Refer to the Queen’s website for explanation of electrical axis of heart. Lead I aVF AXIS http://meds.queensu.ca/courses/assets/modules/ts-ecg/printableversion.html LEFT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY V1 or V2 V5, V6 or aVL R wave S wave If the depth or the S wave and the height of the R wave combined are greater than 35 mm, or 3.5 mV, there is left ventricular hypertrophy! Alternatively, a similar criteria is satisfied if the R wave in aVL is >12 mm or 1.2 mV. LEFT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY V4 V2 = 3 mm and V4 = 5 mm Left ventricular hypertrophy!! V2 RIGHT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY The height of the R waves in the right chest leads, V1 and V2, are increased and the depth of the S waves in the left chest leads, V5 and V6, are increased. Note, above the increased depth of the S wave is seen best in V5. DILATED RIGHT ATRIUM Inspect P waves in leads I, II and III 4 mm or 0.4 mV P waves in the standard limb leads shall not exceed 3 mm, if they do in II the right atrium is dilated. If the P wave is inverted by more than 1 mm in V1 the left atrium if dilated CAN YOU THINK OF TWO CONDITIONS WHICH CAUSE THE RIGHT AND LEFT ATRIA TO BECOME DILATED? WHICH VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY? So, which ventricle is hypertrophied here? WHICH VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY? And, which ventricle is hypertrophied here? WHAT WAS THE MOST LIKELY CAUSE? This adult patient had an uncorrected VSD GIVE CAUSES FOR PATIENTS A AND B V1 V4 V2 V5 V3 V6 Patient A had an ejection murmur in the right IC II space Patient B’s BP was 160/90 mmHg MYOCARDIAL ISCHAEMIA RECOGNISING MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION AND ISCHAEMIA Q S T There are THREE keys to recognising an MI and myocardial ischaemia MYOCARDIAL ISCHAEMIA THE THREE KEYS: 1. Is the ST segment elevated (acute MI) or depressed (ischaemia)? 2. Development of a Q wave is indicative of an MI 3. Changes in V1 – V6, lead I and AVL indicates anterior wall infarction (left anterior descending coronary artery). Changes in lead II, III and AVF, indicates inferior wall infarction (right coronary artery, or a branch, such as posterior descending). There are some other changes to see and there some other causes, but in Phase II, lets start with something you can remember!! MYOCARDIAL ISCHAEMIA This 55 year-old man was on a treadmill and he was coupled to an ECG and above is a snapshot of the strip, what is immediately obvious? GOOD YOU GOT IT!! MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION OK, the ST segment is clearly elevated (C and D) and through the sequence A – F its character changes. Note too, the T wave changes and there also appears a Q wave! The Q wave shall be longer than 0.04s and more than 25% of the size of the R wave (this illustration fails to meet that criterion). MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION SEQUENCE A Normal ECG, moments before the MI B&C Minutes after MI, huge T wave and/or elevated ST segment D Hours after, Q wave appearance, ST still elevated but T wave inversion CHANGES BEST SEEN IN LEADS OPPOSITE MUSCLE MOST AFFECTED. E Days after, Pathological Q waves and T wave inversion F Weeks after, Q + T wave STILL abnormal!! That wasn’t so difficult was it? So what about a few formative Qs without the answers, please take a copy of this e-loop and review the slides and get the answers in your own time Continue to the next slide! Warning, some of the following you have not covered yet, but allow you to see our expectations at the end of the cardiovascular module FORMATIVE QUESTIONS A 60 year-old man who experiences central chest pain lasting one hour before subsiding and has become breathless. WHAT has affected WHICH part of his heart and which blood vessel and WHAT pathology is causing this? FORMATIVE QUESTIONS A 45 year-old woman who has started having episodes of fainting over the last two days. WHAT has affected WHICH part of her heart and what are the atrial and ventricular rates? FORMATIVE QUESTIONS A 70 year-old man with palpitations, breathlessness and a history of a previous MI WHAT is the heart rate? DISREGARD THE ARRHYTHMIA – YOU HAVE NOT SEEN THIS BEFORE FORMATIVE QUESTIONS A 55 year-old woman with weight loss, intolerance of heat and protruding eyes, she also complained of palpitations WHAT was her cardiac problem, WHAT was the cause and WHAT was her heart rate WELL DONE! These simple ECG interpretations represent the expectations for a Phase II student, you may meet them in an OSCE or a multiple choice question!!