Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director [email protected] / .

94
Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director [email protected] / www.TEAEMS.com

Transcript of Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director [email protected] / .

Page 1: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director

[email protected] / www.TEAEMS.com

Page 2: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Part I: Cardiac Anatomy Review

Part II: The Cardiac Cycle

Part III: From One Beat to Many

Part IV: Rhythm Analysis

Page 3: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

What is an EKG really looking at?

Page 4: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

German “Elektrokardiogramm”

Record of the heart’s electrical depolarizations & repolarizations over time Arrhythmias, ischemia, & conduction abnormalities Electrolyte disturbances Non-cardiac diseases (i.e. hypothermia, PE)

Page 5: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

3 lead “overview” image of heart I (lateral) II (inferior) III (inferior)

Useful for checking arrhythmias

Not great for looking for ischemic changes

Page 6: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 7: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 8: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 9: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Leads I, II & III are “limb leads”

Leads aVR, aVL, & aVF are “augmented” limb leads

Page 10: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

V1 - 4th ICS to right of sternumV2 - 4th ICS to left of sternum

Page 11: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

V3 - Between V2 & V4

Page 12: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

V4 - 5th ICS at MCLV5 - Horizontally with V4 at AAL

Page 13: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

V6 - Horizontally with V4 & V5 at MAL

Page 14: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Lead II Continuous Strip

I AvR V1 V3

II AvL V2 V4

III AvF V3 V5

Page 15: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

I AvR V1 V4

Lateral Septal Anterior

II AvL V2 V5Inferior Lateral Septal Lateral

III AvF V3 V6Inferior Inferior Anterior Lateral

Page 16: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Right Coronary Artery (RCA) perfuses right ventricle / inferior heart Inferior heart

Left Main Artery (LMA) divides into: Left Anterior Descending

Artery (LAD) perfuses anterior left ventricle

Left Circumflex Artery (LCX) perfuses lateral left ventricle

Page 17: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Each coronary artery = one part of the EKG

You must see changes in >two “contiguous” leads to diagnose ischemia

Contiguous leads = heart “territories”: Inferior, Anterior, Lateral, Septal

Page 18: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Right ventricle positioned downward & inferior

Innervated by vagus nerve Same nerve as stomach IMIs often present with

N/V not “chest pain”

Page 19: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

IIInferior

III AvF Inferior Inferior

Page 20: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Two vessels cover large area

V2 overlaps septal & anterior areas

Septal MI is best seen in V1 & V2

Page 21: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

V1Septal

V2Septal

Page 22: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Septum & anterior left ventricle are the “precordial” leads

V1 & V2 directly over cardiac septum

V2 (septal overlap), V3, V4 look at anterior heart

Page 23: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

V3Anterior

V4Anterior

Page 24: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Winds around lateral heart & left ventricle

LMA “Widow Maker”: Divides into LAD & LCX,

perfuses left ventricle LMA occlusion causes

massive antero-lateral MI

Page 25: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

I Lateral

AvL V5 Lateral Lateral

V6 Lateral

Page 26: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

I AvR V1 V4

Lateral Septal Anterior

LMA, LCX RCA, LAD LAD

II AvL V2 V5

Inferior Lateral Septal Lateral

RCA LMA, LCX RCA, LAD LMA, LCX

III AvF V3 V6

Inferior Inferior Anterior Lateral

RCA RCA LAD LMA, LCX

Contiguous Leads

I, AvL, V5, V6

II, III, AvF

V1, V2

(V2, V3)

V3, V4

Page 27: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

The heart is nothing more than a mechanical pump running on electricity

Page 28: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

The heart is a mechanical pump running on electrical energy

Electrical energy pathways determine how well the heart functions

Changes in electricity = changes in heart function

Page 29: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Sinoatrial Node Atrioventricular NodeLeft Atrium

Right Atrium

Right Ventricle Left Ventricle

Bundle of His

Page 30: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

1. SA Node

2. AV Node

3. Bundle of His

4. Right & Left Ventricles

Electrical Electrical PathwayPathway

SA Node

AV Node

HisBundle

RightVentricle

Left Ventricle

Page 31: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

One complex = one cardiac cycle

Recognizing normal means understanding abnormal

Page 32: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Atrial DepolarizationVentricular DepolarizationVentricular Repolarization

Page 33: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Width = time

Height & depth = voltage

Upward deflection = positive

Downward delection = negative

Page 34: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

SA to AV node path causes atrial contraction

Upright in II, III, & aVF

Inverted in aVR

Variable P wave shapes suggests ectopic pacemaker

Page 35: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

120 - 200 ms (3 to 5 small boxes) Long = 1st degree heart block Short = pre-excitation syndrome (WPW) Variable = other heart blocks

PR depression = atrial injury or pericarditis

Page 36: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Short PR interval <120 ms, <3 small boxes

Slurred QRS upstroke = “delta wave”

Young, healthy person with CP & palpitations

Consider with “shackalitis”

Page 37: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Atrial impulses conducted to ventricles via accessory pathway causing reentry

Page 38: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Ventricular contraction coordinated by Bundle of His & Purkinje fibers

0.06 to 0.10 sec

Duration, height & shape diagnose arrhythmias, conduction abnormalities, hypertrophy, infarction, electrolyte derangements

Page 39: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Short: <0.08 secs Seen in SVT

Long: >0.12 secs Often related to a

bundle branch block

Page 40: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Normal (physiologic) or abnormal (pathologic)

Normal: Septal depolarization Best seen in lateral leads I, aVL, V5 & V6

Qs > 1/3 R wave height, or >0.04 sec length abnormal May show infarction

Page 41: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

0.08 - 0.12 sec

J point to beginning of T wave

Flat or depressed ST: Ischemia

ST elevation: Infarction

J Point

Page 42: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Ventricular repolarization

T wave usually upright Inverted: ischemia, hypertrophy, CVA Tall: hyperkalemia Flat: ischemia, hypokalemia

Page 43: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Beginning of QRS to end of T wave Ventricular depolarization to “resetting” the

conduction system

Normal ~ 0.40 secs Interval varies based on HR & must

be adjusted (Corrected QT / QTc)

Page 44: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

• The heart takes too long to repolarize leaving it vulnerable to aberrant electrical impulses

• Torsades de pointes, VT, VF

Page 45: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Prolonged QT interval Alcohol abuse Hypomagnesemia, hypokalemia

May have a pulse, but are never “stable”

RX: magnesium bolus

Page 46: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Not always seen, typically small, follows T wave

Purkinje fiber repolarization

Hypokalemia, hypercalcemia, hypothermia, CVA, or thyroid disease

Inverted U wave: ischemia, volume overload

Page 47: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 48: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Putting it together…

Page 49: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

1 small block = 1 mm² = 0.04 s = 40 ms

5 small blocks = 1 large block = 0.20 s = 200 ms

5 large blocks = 1 second

Page 50: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Each large black line = 300 150 100 75 60 50

Page 51: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

If there is an P wave before each QRS & both are upright, then the rhythm is “sinus” From sino-atrial / SA node

P wave round, not peaked & unidirectional except in V1 & V2 (often biphasic)

Page 52: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Normal axis leads I & AVF are positive (upright)

When heart enlarges / hypertrophies or normal pathways are re-routed, the “axis” changes

Anything more beyond the scope of this lecture

Page 53: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Right Ventricular Hypertrophy R wave >S in V1, becomes

progressively smaller S wave in V5,V6 RAD with wide QRS

Left Ventricular Hypertrophy S in V1 + R in V5 (in mm) = 35mm LA with wide QRS

Why is this important for prehospital providers?

Page 54: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Anywhere in conduction system

Ectopic beats generated from foci other than usual sites of electrical activity Some ectopic beats in a healthy persons normal Persistent ectopic beats become “blocks” / conduction dz

Conduction disorders manifest as slowed conduction (1st degree), intermittent conduction failure (2nd degree), or complete conduction failure (3rd degree)

Page 55: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Slowed electrical signal not travelling through atrial tissue at normal speed resulting in long P-R PR > 0.20 sec Always a P waves before QRS P-R interval consistent

May be due to ischemia or infarct

Page 56: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Progressive delay AV conduction, until impulse completely blocked Occurs because impulse arrives during absolute refractory

period, so no conduction no QRS P-P intervals shorten until pause occurs Next P wave occurs & the cycle begins again

P-P interval following pause greater than P-P interval before pause

Block usually located in AV node, so QRS narrow

Page 57: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Multiple constant PR intervals before blocked P wave

Ventricular rate always les than atrial rate, depends on number of impulses conducted through AV node Atrial & ventricular rates irregular P waves present in 2, 3 or 4:1 conduction with QRS PR interval constant for each P wave prior to QRS

Type II AV block is almost always located in bundle branches so QRS is wide

Page 58: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Atria & ventricles controlled by separate pacemakers

Narrow QRS suggests AV block with junctional escape

Wide QRS suggests AV node or bundle branch block block with ventricular escape (“idioventricular”)

Page 59: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

•40 – 60 BPM

•“Junction” between atria & ventricles

•P wave “flipped” as beat originates below SA node

Page 60: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

LBBBLBBB• RBBB

• QRS >0.12

• “M” shaped QRS in V1 or V2

• R = 1st peak

• Ischemia, infarction, electrolyte abnormalities, meds, CNS disease

LBBB QRS >0.1-0.12s• Wide & “Peaked” QRS in V6• R Prime = 2nd peak

Page 61: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Stage I: Ischemia

Stage 2: Injury

Stage 3: Infarction

Stage 4: Resolution

Page 62: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Look in all leads for:Q waves

Inverted T wavesST segment elevation or depression

Page 63: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 64: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

• Normal T wave upright when QRS upright

• If T wave inverted, then = ischemia

• Try and compare with old EKG to determine if inversion is new or old

Page 65: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

• ST elevation + Q waves = acute infarction

• “Non-Q” MI = infarct without Q waves

• ST often returns to baseline in time

Page 66: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

6 hours from lumen blocked by clot to start of tissue death appears as ST elevation

6 hour period is when must start TPA (“clot busters”) to salvage heart tissue

“Time is Muscle!”

Page 67: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Qs represent progression of injury to infarction

Pathologic Qs = QRS (-) deflection after PR interval & >1/3 size of QRS

If ST elevations & Qs at same time, STEMI evolving from injury to necrosis

Page 68: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Development of scar tissue in infarcted area occurs roughly 2 weeks after necrosis

Affected part of heart may show EKG changes forever

Be careful – flipped T waves can also mean pt having new ischemia!

Persistent ST depression may indicate “Non-Q” MI

Page 69: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Pacemakers Atrial or ventricular

or both

Looks like “spikes” on the ECG

Be wary of the patient with a pacer who has no spikes

Page 70: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Some EKG lead groups are electrical “mirrors”

ST elevations in one group appear as depressions in the other group in two specific areas: Inferior and Lateral Septal & Posterior

Elevations always come first If there are ST elevations on EKG, ST depressions on the

same EKG might be reciprocal instead of ischemic

Page 71: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

There are no true posterior leads on a standard EKG

Septal leads look at anterior & posterior heart & “mirror” an infero-posterior infarction

Remember the RCA perfuses inferior & posterior areas: ST elevations in II, III,

aVF? ST depressed in V1, V2?

II

III

V1

V2

Page 72: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 73: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Most prominent feature are peaked-T waves

“Sine waves” also seen

Changes seen across ALL leads, not in a single coronary artery pattern Common with all

electrolyte / metabolic abnormalities

Page 74: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .
Page 75: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Anatomy plus electricity equals rhythm

Page 76: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

SA node origin

Rate 60 – 100 beats/ minute > 100 = sinus tachycardia < 60 = sinus bradycardia

If irregular, rate determined by both a “ventricular” & “atrial” rate

Page 77: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Normal variant

Irregular rhythm varies with respiration

All P waves look identical

Page 78: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Intrinsic rate for SA node: 60 - 100bpm

Causes: Inferior MI (RCA lesion) Sedation

Page 79: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Rhythm originates in the SA node P wave for every QRS Rate > 100 / minute

Increased cardiac stress from systemic process: Hypovolemia / Hypotension Hypoxia Anxiety Drugs (i.e. cocaine) Exercise

Page 80: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Rate 60 – 90 bpm

Occasional “escape” ectopic beats

Also known as “PACs”

Page 81: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Atrial reentry from a circular conductive pathway

Single ectopic pacemakerMay have inverted P-waves

Page 82: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Two or more asynchronous cardiac pacemakers

The hallmark of this form of SVT is multiple P-wave morphologies (one from each pacemaker)

Page 83: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Absence of p-waves before each QRS

Irregularly irregular from ectopic foci with re-entry

Rate ~ 200-300bpm

Page 84: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

No True P Waves

Page 85: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Multiple sawtooth edged P waves before each QRS

Many ectopic pacemakers Unstable rhythm May progress to atrial fibrillation

Page 86: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

• No P waves or atrial activity

• Normal QRS • Ventricles generating slow escape rate (20-40 BPM)

“Accelerated” IVR faster than expected rate (>60) Ventricular pacemakers speed up & capture as pacers

are faster than the underlying rhythm

Page 87: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

SVT: Generated above

ventricle P waves present Narrow

VT: Generated in

ventricles No P waves Wide

Page 88: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Generated above ventricles so narrow complex with P waves

May be normal in bursts in young, healthy individuals

Often difficult to differentiate from VT

Page 89: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

•Wide QRS (>140 ms) without atrial activity / P waves

•ANY wide tachycardia is VT until proven otherwise

•Often caused by ischemic / infarcted conductive ventricular tissue causing a reentry tachycardia

Page 90: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

SVT

Rhythm - Regular Rate - 140-220 BPM QRS Duration - normal P Wave - Buried in preceding

T wave P-R Interval - Depends on site

of supraventricular pacemaker

Impulses stimulating heart are not generated by sinus node, instead from a collection of tissue around the AV node

VT

Rhythm - Regular Rate - 180-190 BPM QRS Duration - Prolonged P Wave - Not seen Abnormal ventricular

tissues generating a rapid & irregular heart rhythm & poor cardiac output is

Page 91: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Wide and slow No P waves as rhythm starts below atria

<6 in a minute = Normal >6 in a row= Ventricular Tachycardia

Page 92: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Multiple ventricular areas contract without coordination

Quivering results in loss of cardiac output & death

Cure for VF is electrical defibrillation

Page 93: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

Alan Lindsey ECG Learning Center in Cyberspace

Dubin’s Guide to ECGs London Ambulance Sercice Unoffical

ECG Guide Brady’s, Mosby’s, Caroline’s

Prehospital Provider Textbooks www.TheMDSite.com Wikipedia, Google The ECG Guide (Iphone App)

Page 94: Amy Gutman MD ~ EMS Medical Director prehospitalmd@gmail.com / .

“Almost” everything you need to know: Part I: Cardiac Anatomy Review Part II: The Cardiac Cycle Part III: From One Beat to Many Part IV: Basic Rhythm Analysis

Is this everything you truly need to know?

Look at every strip, ECG & rhythm you can…you need to know “normal” before you can know “abnormal”