tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1199060416202745408.post249993721305288116..comments2024-03-19T13:40:12.355+08:00Comments on ECG of the Week: ECG of the Week - 21st January 2013Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09026589956407176781noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1199060416202745408.post-68302299170088042512013-01-23T06:42:17.622+08:002013-01-23T06:42:17.622+08:00I agree with Ruan that this is probably a Shifting...I agree with Ruan that this is probably a Shifting Atrial Pacemaker between a sinus bradycardia and an ectopic atrial rhythm/bradycardia with varying degrees of atrial fusion which would account for the changing P-wave morphology. Each focus is vying for control as the dominant pacemaker of the heart as they discharge at similar rates. Jason E. Roediger, CCThttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12375233408457825429noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1199060416202745408.post-27923601850865030892013-01-18T23:34:48.290+08:002013-01-18T23:34:48.290+08:00Thanks for a great website John! I would put my mo...Thanks for a great website John! I would put my money on a wandering atrial pacemaker, as the P wave morphology (pacemaker site) progressively shifts. In view of a history of chest pain, this could be due to either SA nodal ischemia (possibly due to ischemia of a dominant circumflex artery - circumflex ischaemia can sometimes occur in the abscence of ECG ST changes) or a Bezold-Jarisch reflex (high vagal tone) due to left ventricular inferior wall ischemia.<br />Ruan Louw www.heartrhythm.co.zaAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15359036440752880483noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1199060416202745408.post-21073447638895924092013-01-18T23:17:27.663+08:002013-01-18T23:17:27.663+08:00Rate: V-rate of ~35-40 bpm (seee-loowww), two atri...Rate: V-rate of ~35-40 bpm (seee-loowww), two atrial rates possibly present, both have roughly 1620 ms P-P or ~35-40 bpm<br />Rhythm: regular<br />P-waves: 2 types present, both not likely to be sinus, low atrial<br />PRi: normal with both focii but one is a bit shorter than the other<br />QRSd: 90ms<br /><br />Rhythm: ectopic atrial bradycardia (I'm having a hard time picturing a junctional rhythm with such a slow AVN transit to have the P-waves precede the QRS's and the QRS's be narrow)<br /><br />Axis: -5 deg (normal), decent R-wave progression<br />QTi/QTc: normal, U-waves visible in V2-V4<br />ST/T-waves: III almost looks like ST-E, but that is probably the Ta-wave; otherwise unremarkable<br /><br />DDx? SSS comes to mind, B-blocker/Ca-channel blocker/antiarrhtyhmic OD, digitoxicity. I would have figured ischemia of the SAN would have shown up, electrolytes (but no other interval abnormalities suggesting it), high vagal tone (why no AVN block?). Other considerations include pacemaker failure, congenital cardiac disease.<br /><br />Very neat strip.Christopherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11415988855392944633noreply@blogger.com