ECG Interpretation
ECG Interpretation
ECG Interpretation
Normal ECG
The P wave represents the spread of electrical activation (depolarisation) through the atrial myocardium. Normally, it is a smooth,
rounded deflection preceding the QRS complex.
The QRS complex represents the spread of electrical activation through the ventricular myocardium. It is usually (not always) the
largest deflection on the ECG and is "spiky" in shape.
Deflections resulting from electrical activation of the ventricles are called QRS complexes, irrespective of whether they start with a
positive (above the baseline) or a negative (below the baseline) deflection and whether they have one or more recognisable deflections
within them.
Normal ECG
The various components of the QRS complex however, are named on the basis of the following convention :
The T wave represents electrical recovery (repolarisation) of the ventricular myocardium. It is a broad, rounded wave following the
QRS complex.
The U wave may be due to slow repolarization of the papillary muscles. Some causes include: Bradycardia, hypokalaemia and digoxin.
The 12 lead system
leads I, II, III are standard limb leads/bipolar leads
Bipolar meaning a lead is pair of electrodes joined together to record the potential difference between the electrodes
With the bipolar system, one limb is connected to the positive terminal of the recording galvanometer and another limb to its negative
terminal. Three limbs (right arm-RA, left arm-LA and left leg/foot-LL) are used. The right leg was used as "earth", to minimise
interference.
Bipolar leads:
Lead I: RA (-) to LA (+)
Lead II: RA (-) to LL (+)
Lead III: LA (-) to LL (+)
Augmented/unipolar limb leads (frontal plane)
Initially, unipolar limb leads were used, in which recordings were made from the RA (lead R), LA (lead L) and LL (lead F for "foot").
Any voltage measurement requires two electrodes: a "reference electrode", whose potential does not change during the cardiac cycle,
and an "exploring electrode" attached to the limb in question. A voltage or "V" lead was used as an indifferent electrode by joining R, L
and F together.
Nowadays, the limb connections are slightly modified, to "augment" the size of the deflections obtained from leads L, R and F. These
are named as follows:
With each precordial lead, the positive (recording) terminal of the galvanometer is connected to an electrode at an agreed site on the
chest wall, and the negative terminal is connected to an indifferent electrode, the"V" electrode (see above).
Hence, the chest leads are designated as V1, V2, V3, V4, V5 and V6.
Published in 1913, this hypothesis attempts to explain the principles of electrocardiography on a scientific basis. It is based on four
assumptions which are not completely true, but do provide some basis. The four assumptions are as follows:
Complex coordination of multiple waves group together, the only main complex QRS
Point -only one pt on ECG that is the Jpoint where QRS ends and ST segment begins
ECG paper
10 second strip
Bottom one or two lines has the full rhythm strip of a specific lead spanning the
entire 10 seconds other leads span about 2.5sec
1 large box is 5mm, 0.2sec equal 5 small boxes 1 small box 0.04sec and 1mm in
length
Electrophysiology of heart
The sino-atrial or SA node is situated in the right atrium at its junction with the superior vena cava. Normally, the SA node initiates
activation of the atria, which causes a wave of contraction to pass across the atria. Following atrial contraction, the impulse is delayed at
the atrioventricular (AV) node, located in the septal wall of the right atrium.
The predominant direction of spread of ventricular activation is downwards and somewhat to the left
Demographics the name of the patient and the date and time it was recorded.
Calibration signal: The amplifier gain is normally adjusted so that a 1 millivolt signal through the ECG amplifier results in a vertical
deflection of 10 mm (two large ECG squares). All voltage measurements on the ECG depend entirely on the accuracy of this calibration
signal. (The paper speed is 25 mm/s, which amounts to 0.04 s per small box on the horizontal axis).
Recording quality: Look for any baseline drift (which makes ST segment analysis impossible), skeletal muscle interference (seen as
sharp, irregular, spiky waves throughout the recording - e.g. during shivering) or mains frequency interference (seen as regular sine
wave oscillation with a frequency of 50 Hz).
Rate
1 small square 0.04ms,1 Large square 0.2ms
Irregular RR interval not equal to determine rate 300 x 3 /number of big squares in 3 RR distances.
Rhythm
The heart is said to be in sinus rhythm based on the following criteria:
Ventricular Ventricular
rhythms(accelerated rhythms(accelerated
idioventricular or idioventricular or
ventricular ventricular
tachycardia tachycardia