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Working with ECGs Dr Cynthia Lim Dr Dean Pritchard FACEMs, Emergency Department The Northern Hospital
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Working with ECGs

Feb 24, 2016

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Miroslav Emling

Working with ECGs. Dr Cynthia Lim Dr Dean Pritchard FACEMs, Emergency Department The Northern Hospital. ECG 123s. Measurement of electrical flow across the heart using electrodes placed on the chest and limbs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Working with ECGs

Working with ECGs

Dr Cynthia LimDr Dean Pritchard

FACEMs, Emergency Department The Northern Hospital

Page 2: Working with ECGs

ECG 123s

– Measurement of electrical flow across the heart using electrodes placed on the chest and limbs

– Deviation of electrical flow from normal pathways indicates cardiac anomaly or cardiac disease

Page 3: Working with ECGs

The Leads

• Limb Leads– aVR – Right arm– aVL – Left arm– aVF – Left leg

• Vectors – Flow of +ve current– I – R arm L arm– II – R arm L leg– III – L arm L leg

Page 4: Working with ECGs

The Leads

• Chest leads

– V1– V2– V3– V4– V5– V6

Page 5: Working with ECGs

Look at leads I and avF

If in left quadrant then look at lead II

Axis

Page 6: Working with ECGs

Successive approximation method

Page 7: Working with ECGs

ECG Morphology

Page 8: Working with ECGs

Pick the Problem…

NORMAL ECG

Page 9: Working with ECGs

ECG of 2 year old – normal or abnormal?

Higher rate, Partial RBBB pattern, Dominant R V1, R axis deviation

Page 10: Working with ECGs

Chest Pain

Page 11: Working with ECGs

The Barn Door…

Acute anterior ST elevation myocardial infarction

Page 12: Working with ECGs

The Barn door

Acute inferior ST elevation myocardial infarction

Page 13: Working with ECGs

What about this?

Septolateral Non-ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Page 14: Working with ECGs

And this?

Acute Pericarditis

Page 15: Working with ECGs

ACS – STEMI

• Any ST dep except V1 or aVR (allowed in acute pericarditis)

• ST elevation III > II• Horizontal or convex up ST elevation• New Q waves

Page 16: Working with ECGs

ACS – acute pericarditis

• PR dep multiple leads– Only reliably seen viral– transient

• Low voltage and tachycardia = large pericardial effusion

• Friction rub• Use T-P as baseline (not P-P interval)• If in doubt serial ECGs

Page 17: Working with ECGs

T-wave Changes

• T-wave inversions– STEMI – After the

appearance of ST changes

– NSTEMI – After a period of hyperacute T-wave changes

• May persist for months or permanently