1 / 11

ECG Underwriting Puzzler

ECG Underwriting Puzzler. Presented by: Bill Rooney, M.D. Obtaining Best Results from this presentation. For best results—please do the following: Select “Slide Show” from the menu option on top. Select “From the beginning”. Slowly click through the presentation Have fun!---Good luck .

vlora
Télécharger la présentation

ECG Underwriting Puzzler

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ECG Underwriting Puzzler Presented by: Bill Rooney, M.D.

  2. Obtaining Best Results from this presentation For best results—please do the following: Select “Slide Show” from the menu option on top Select “From the beginning” Slowly click through the presentation Have fun!---Good luck

  3. QUESTION???? How would you interpret this ECG? ECG Puzzler

  4. If you said It looks normal other than for one PVC you were correct. PVC’s can exist in many forms and configurations. Always be on the lookout!! I will take you down the road of PVC’s and the mischief they can cause.

  5. The PVC can be seen in several leads below. It is the same PVC but seen from different angles. PVC’s are early occurring beats with a wide (typically >0.16 sec) QRS complex. ECG Puzzler

  6. ECG Puzzler PVC’s typically have marked repolarization abnormalities. If several PVC’s are present and they all have the same QRS morphology they are called unifocal PVC’s. But, if those PVC’s have different QRS morphologies then they are referred to as multifocal PVC’s. PVC’s have a QRS morphology that is different than the sinus QRS complexes. When a PVC alternates with a normal sinus beat this is called ventricular bigeminy. A PVC every third beat is ventricular trigeminy. 2 PVC’s in a row are called a ventricular couplet. 3 PVC’s in a row are called a ventricular triplet but 3 or more PVC’s in a row are also called ventricular tachycardia. PVC’s _____________________________ Facts to Know

  7. The Many Faces of PVC’s Single PVC Multifocal PVC Bigeminy Couplet Triplet PVC’s V-tach

  8. QUESTION???? How would you interpret this ECG? One more ECG to consider

  9. Is that artifact in leads I, II, and III or is it an abnormality? What is that strange beat??? Answer: The wide and bizarre beat, which is seen in multiple leads, is a PVC. Other than the PVC the ECG looks to be WNL.

  10. Here is a rhythm strip from the previous slide ECG Puzzler This is called a “compensatory pause”. The pause allows the ventricles to reset and be ready for the next impulse coming down from the SA node. Notice the pause after the PVC? Single PVC The SA node continues to fire but the beat is not conducted as the ventricle is just not ready for it yet. The p wave gets buried in the QRS complex somewhere. If the ventricle however is ready for the impulse then the next normal QRS complex occurs as scheduled and causes the PVC to become interpolated”. Interpolated PVC’s are rare. The PVC is “sandwiched” in between 2 normal beats and there is no pause.

  11. PVC’s There are no additional mortality concerns with interpolated PVC’s versus PVC’s with the compensatory pause but it remains important to be able to recognize them. For further reading: Please see page 137 in Dale Dubin’s 6th edition of Rapid Interpretation of EKG’s That concludes this issue of the ECG Puzzler!! Contact me if you have any questions!! ECG Solved

More Related