Introduction To ECG
Introduction To ECG
The work rhythm is used to refer to the part of the heart that controls the spread of
depolarisation. The normal heart rhythm begins in the SA node, so it called sinus
rhythm.
ST segment
PR interval
The PR interval is from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS
complex. The PR interval represents the time taken for depolarisation to
spread across both atria, through AV node, bundle of his and purkinje fibre to
the ventricles. So, it measures the delay in transmission of action potential
from atria to ventricles. The PR interval should not exceed 0.2 s and loger intervals
indicate a defect in conduction pathway called AV block.
The PR interval should not exceed 0.2s. longer intervals indicate a defect in the
conduction pathway called heart block.
QT interval
The QT interval is measured from the beginning of the QRS complex to the end of
the T wave. It represents the time taken for ventricular depolarisation and
repolarisation. The QT interval is typically 350-420ms
Long Q-T syndrome: if T wave becomes too long (ventricular repolarisation is too
long) early action potentials be generated and if they reach threshold ventricular
fibrillation can occur.
In some ECGs, a U wave can be seen, and it may represent repolarisation of the
papillary muscles. If a U wave follows a normal shaped T wave, it can be assumed to
be normal. If it follows a flattened T wave then it is pathological.
The muscle mass of the atria is small compared to the ventricles, so the
depolarisation associated with the contraction of the atria is small therefore the P
wave is small. The mass of the ventricles is large so the QRS complex is large.
L-Left wrist
R-Right wrist
F-Left ankle
Transverse atria
Through the bundle of His, Purkinje fibres and left/right bundle branches
12 lead ECG
The ECG is made up of 12 views of the heart. These views are obtained from 6 limb
leads (I, II, III, aVR, aVL, aVF) and six from chest leads (V1-V6).
Limb leads
The 6 limb leads are obtained from three electrodes being attached to right arm, left
arm and left leg.
Lead I, II and III and bipolar. Whereas lead aVR, aVL and aVF are unipolar leads.
aV-augmented voltage
L- left wrist
R- right wrist
F- left ankle
N- usually right ankle
The limb leads look at the heart in the vertical plane. The limb leads consist of 3
bipolar leads (I,II and III).
Chest leads
The chest leads look at the heart in a horizontal plane. The chest leads are unipolar
Heart rate
Unit of measure is beats per minute
How large or small heart muscle is.
If there is more muscle mass, there
is more depolarisation through it.
10mm-1mv
1 small square-0.1mv
1 small square=0.04s
1 large square=0.2s
To calculate HR
300/No. of large squares
1500/No. of small squares
What does the ECG tell us?
1 small square=0.1mV
1 small square=0.04s