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ECG Abnormalities In Pulmonary Medicine Dr. Manjit S. Tendolkar Dept of Chest Medicine, Seth G. S. Medical College and K.E.M. Hospital, Mumbai.

ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

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What we need to look for in an ECG from the perspective of Pulmonary Medicine has been presented here. Feedbacks are welcome. Thank You.

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Page 1: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

ECG Abnormalities In

Pulmonary Medicine

Dr. Manjit S. Tendolkar

Dept of Chest Medicine,

Seth G. S. Medical College and K.E.M. Hospital, Mumbai.

Page 2: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Normal ECG

Page 3: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

P-wave = <0.12 sec & <2.5 mm height (limb) <1.5 mm (precordial)

P-R interval = 0.12-0.2 sec

QRS = 0.12 sec

QTc = 0.42 sec (QT/sq root RR)

Page 4: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

P Wave

P wave is always positive in lead II and

always negative in lead aVR during sinus

rhythm

Page 5: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

P-Pulmonale

The presence of tall, peaked P waves

(>2.5 mm) in lead II is a sign of right atrial

enlargement, usually due to pulmonary

hypertension (e.g. cor pulmonale from

chronic respiratory disease).

Page 6: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Q wave

Considered Pathological if

• > 40 ms (1 mm) wide

• > 2 mm deep

• > 25% of depth of QRS complex

• Seen in leads V1-3

Signifies Old MI

Page 7: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

R waveAbnormalities:

1. Dominant R wave in V1

2. Dominant R wave in aVR (TCA,

Dextrocardia)

3. Poor R wave progression

Page 8: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Dominant R wave in V1Normal in Children and Young Adults

Right Ventricular Hypertrophy

- Pulmonary Embolus

- RBBB

Posterior Wall MI

Right Ventricular Hypertrophy

Page 9: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Poor R wave ProgressionDefined as R wave < 3mm height in V3

Causes:

• LVH

• Prior Antero Septal MI

• Inaccurate Lead Placement

• Normal Variant

Page 10: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

T wave

Upright in all leads except aVR and V1

Amplitude: < 5 mm in limb leads ; < 10 mm in

precordial leads

Page 11: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Peaked T wave (narrow & symmetrically

peaked)

Hyperkalemia

Page 12: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Hyperacute T wave (broad &

asymmetrically peaked)

Early stages of ST elevated

MI, often preceding

occurrence of ST elevation

and Q waves.

Page 13: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

T wave InversionNormal in children

Pulmonary embolism

Ventricular hypertrophy

(Strain Pattern)

Raised ICP

T wave inversion in lead III

is normal variant.

Pathological T wave

inversion is usually

symmetrical and deep (> 3

mm)

Page 14: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Biphasic T wave

Ischaemia ( up-down )

Hypokalemia ( down-

up )

Page 15: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Camel Hump T wavesProminent U wave fused to

end of T wave ( severe

Hypokalemia)

Hidden P wave embedded in

T wave ( Sinus Tachycardia,

Heart Blocks)

Page 16: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

U wave

Normally, inversely proportional to heart rate.

Grows bigger as heart rate slows down. (visible at

HR < 65)

Normal, < 25 % T wave voltage or < 1-2 mm

amplitude

Page 17: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Prominent U wave

Severe Hypokalemia

Digoxin

Page 18: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Abnormalities of

Segments & Intervals

Page 19: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

QRSNarrow Complex <100 ms (

Supraventricular)

Broad Complex >120 ms (

Ventricular or aberrant supra

ventricular conduction -

Hyperkalemia,BBB)

Sinus rhythm with frequent ventricular ectopics

Page 20: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

RBBB• In RBBB, activation of the right ventricle is delayed as depolarisation has to spread across the

septum from the left ventricle.

• The left ventricle is activated normally, meaning that the early part of the QRS complex is

unchanged.

• The delayed right ventricular activation produces a secondary R wave (R’) in the right

precordial leads (V1-3) and a wide, slurred S wave in the lateral leads.

Page 21: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Diagnostic Criteria Of RBBB• Broad QRS > 120 ms

• RSR’ pattern in V1-3 (‘M-shaped’ QRS complex)

• Wide, slurred S wave in the lateral leads (I, aVL, V5-6)

Page 22: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Causes of RBBB

Cor Pulmonale / Right Ventricular Hypertrophy

Pulmonary Emboli

IHD

Page 23: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Incomplete RBBB

QRS < 120 ms

Normal Variant, Common in Children.

Page 24: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

LBBBCauses:

Hyperkalemia

Digoxin Toxicity

Page 25: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Hypokalaemia

Decreased extracellular potassium causes myocardial

hyperexcitability with the potential to develop re-entrant

arrhythmias

• Hypokalaemia is defined as a potassium level < 3.5 mEq/L

• Moderate hypokalemia is a serum level of < 3.0 mEq/L

• Severe hypokalemia is defined as a level < 2.5 mEq/L

Page 26: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Changes appear when K+ falls below about 2.7 mmol/l

• Increased amplitude and width of the P wave

• Prolongation of the PR interval

• T wave flattening and inversion

• ST depression

• Prominent U waves (best seen in the precordial leads)

• Apparent long QT interval due to fusion of the T and U

waves (= long QU interval)

Page 27: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

With worsening hypokalaemia:

• Frequent supraventricular and ventricular

ectopics

• Supraventricular tachyarrhythmias: AF, atrial

flutter, atrial tachycardia

• Potential to develop life-threatening ventricular

arrhythmias, e.g. VT, VF and Torsades de Pointes

Page 28: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Hyperkalemia

• Increased extracellular potassium reduces myocardial excitability, with depression of both pacemaking and

conducting tissues.

• Progressively worsening hyperkalaemia leads to suppression of impulse generation by the SA node and

reduced conduction by the AV node and His-Purkinje system, resulting in bradycardia and conduction blocks and

ultimately cardiac arrest.

• Hyperkalaemia is defined as a potassium level > 5.5 mEq/L

• Moderate hyperkalaemia is a serum potassium > 6.0 mEq/L

• Severe hyperkalaemia is a serum potassium > 7.0 mE/L

Page 29: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Serum potassium > 5.5 mEq/L is associated

with repolarization abnormalities:

• Peaked T waves (usually the earliest sign of

hyperkalaemia)

Page 30: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Serum potassium > 6.5 mEq/L is associated

with progressive paralysis of the atria:

• P wave widens and flattens

• PR segment lengthens

• P waves eventually disappear

Page 31: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Serum potassium > 7.0 mEq/L is associated with conduction

abnormalities and bradycardia:

• Prolonged QRS interval with bizarre QRS morphology

• High-grade AV block with slow junctional and ventricular escape

rhythms

• Any kind of conduction block (bundle branch blocks, fascicular

blocks)

• Sinus bradycardia or slow AF

• Development of a sine wave appearance (a pre-terminal rhythm)

Page 32: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Serum potassium level of > 9.0 mEq/Lcauses cardiac

arrest due to:

• Asystole

• Ventricular fibrillation

• PEA with bizarre, wide complex rhythm

Page 34: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

ST Segment Elevation

Acute STEMI may produce ST elevation with either concave, convex or

obliquely straight morphology

Reciprocal ST depression in opposite leads.

Page 35: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Benign Early Repolarization

Causes mild ST elevation with tall T-waves mainly in the

precordial leads. Is a normal variant commonly seen in young,

healthy patients. There is often notching of the J-point — the “fish-

hook” pattern.

No reciprocal ST depression.

Page 37: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

ST Segment Depression• ST depression can be either upsloping, downsloping, or

horizontal.

• Horizontal or downsloping ST depression ≥ 0.5 mm at the J-

point in ≥ 2 contiguous leads indicates myocardial ischaemia

(according to the 2007 Task Force Criteria).

• Upsloping ST depression is non-specific for myocardial

ischaemia.

Page 38: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Hypokalaemia causes widespread downsloping ST

depression with T-wave flattening/inversion, prominent

U waves and a prolonged QU interval.

Page 39: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

Treatment with digoxin causes downsloping ST

depression with a “sagging” morphology, reminiscent

of Salvador Dali’s moustache.

Page 40: ECG Abnormalities in Pulmonary Medicine

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