Chapter 3 ECG Principles
Chapter 3 ECG Principles
Atrioventricular junction
o Area of specialized conduction
tissue
o Provides electrical links between the atrium and the ventricle
Purkinje fibers
o Receive impulses from the bundle
branches
o Relay them to the ventricular
myocardium
o Intrinsic rate: 20 to 40 beats/min
Electrocardiographic Leads
Lead II. To record limb lead II, the negative terminal of the
electrocardiograph is connected to the right arm and the positive terminal
to the left leg. Therefore, when the right arm is negative with respect to
the left leg, the electrocardiograph
records positively.
Another system of leads in wide use is the augmented unipolar limb lead. In this type of
recording, two of the limbs are connected through electrical resistances to the negative
terminal of the electrocardiograph, and the third limb is connected to the positive terminal.
When the positive terminal is on the right arm, the lead is known as the aVR lead; when on
the left arm, the aVL lead; and when on the left leg, the aVF lead
The figure illustrates the electrocardiograms of the healthy heart as recorded from these six
standard chest leads.
Because the heart surfaces are close to the chestwall, each chest lead records mainly the
electrical potential of the cardiac musculature immediately beneath the electrode. Therefore,
relatively minute abnormalities in the ventricles, particularly in the anterior ventricular wall, can
cause marked changes in the electrocardiograms recorded from individual chest leads. In
leads V1 and V2, the QRS recordings of the normal heart are mainly negative because, as
shown in Figure, the chest electrode in these leads is nearer to the base of the heart than to
the apex, and the base of the heart is the direction of electronegativity during most of the
ventricular depolarization process. Conversely, the QRS complexes in leads V4, V5, and V6
are mainly positive because the chest electrode in these leads is nearer the heart apex, which
is the direction of electropositivity during most of depolarization.
When
the cardiac
impulse passes through the heart,electrical current also spreads from the heart into the
adjacent tissues surrounding the heart. A small portion of the current spreads all the way to
the surface of the body. If electrodes are placed on the skin on opposite sides of the heart,
electrical potentials generated by the current can be recorded; the recording is known as an
electrocardiogram. A normal electrocardiogram for two beats of the heart is shown in Figure
1.
Figure 1
The normal electrocardiogram (see Figure 1) is composed of a P wave, a QRS complex, and
a T wave. The QRS complex is often, but not always, three separate waves: the Q wave, the
R wave, and the S wave. The P wave is caused by electrical potentials generated when the
atria depolarize before atrial contraction begins. The QRS complex is caused by potentials
generated when the ventricles depolarize before contraction, that is, as the depolarization
wave spreads through the ventricles. Therefore, both the P wave and the components of the
QRS complex are depolarization waves.
All recordings of electrocardiograms are made with appropriate calibration lines on the
recording paper. Either these calibration lines are already ruled on the paper, as is the case
when a pen recorder is used, or they are recorded on the paper at the same time that the
electrocardiogram is recorded, which is the case with the photographic types of
electrocardiographs.
As shown in Figure 2, the horizontal calibration lines are arranged so that 10 of the small line
divisions upward or downward in the standard electrocardiogram represent 1 millivolt, with
positivity in the upward direction and negativity in the downward direction.
Figure 2.
The vertical lines on the electrocardiogram are time calibration lines. A typical electrocardiogram is run at a
paper speed of 25 millimeters per second, although faster speeds are sometimes used. Therefore, each 25
millimeters in the horizontal direction is 1 second, and each 5-millimeter segment, indicated by the dark vertical
lines, represents 0.20 second. The 0.20-second intervals are then broken into five smaller intervals by thin lines,
each of which represents 0.04 second.
The recorded voltages of the waves in the normal electrocardiogram depend on the manner in
which the electrodes are applied to the surface of the body and how close the electrodes are
to the heart. When one electrodeis placed directly over the ventricles and a second electrode
is placed elsewhere on the body remote from the heart, the voltage of the QRS complex may
be as great as 3 to 4 millivolts. Even this voltage is small in comparison with the monophasic
action potential of 110 millivolts recorded directly at the heart muscle membrane. When
electrocardiograms are recorded from electrodes on the two arms or on one arm and one leg,
the voltage of the QRS complex usually is 1.0 to 1.5 millivolts from the top of the R wave to
the bottom of the S wave; the voltage of the P wave is between 0.1 and 0.3 millivolts; and that
of the T wave is between 0.2 and 0.3 millivolts.
P-Q or P-R Interval. The time between the beginning of the P wave and the beginning of the
QRS complex is the interval between the beginning of electrical excitation of the atria and the
Community Auxiliary in Response for Emergency Page 6
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF ECG
beginning of excitation of the ventricles. This period is called the P-Q interval. The normal P-Q
interval is about 0.16 second. (Often this interval is called the P-R interval because the Q
wave is likely to be absent.).(See figure 3.)
Q-T Interval. Contraction of the ventricle lasts almost from the beginning of the Q wave (or R
wave, if the Q wave is absent) to the end of the T wave. This interval is called the Q-T interval
and ordinarily is about 0.35 second. (See figure 3.)
Figure 3.
SINUS MECHANISM
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
JUNCTIONAL MECHANISM
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
VENTRICULAR MECHANISM
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
ATRIAL MECHANISM
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation:
Atrioventricular/Heart Blocks
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation
Rhythm:
Rate:
P wave:
PR Interval:
QRS complex:
T wave:
QT Interval:
Interpretation