Pediatrics ECG by DR Ali Bel Kheir
Pediatrics ECG by DR Ali Bel Kheir
Pediatrics ECG by DR Ali Bel Kheir
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Electrocardiography
Electricity of the heart
Precordial leads:
V4R: 5th intercostal space, right midclavicular line
V1: 4th intercostal space, right sternal border
V2: 4th intercostal space, left sternal border
V3: use this lead for V4R, must label as such on ECG.
V4: fifth intercostal space, right midclavicular line
V5: anterior axillary line, same horizontal plane as V4
V6: midaxillary line, same horizontal line as V4.
Limb leads: Place on top part of arm or leg (less muscle interference).
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2. Technical Aspects
a) Is the ECG full standard?
Full standard means that the ECG was not reduced in size so that it can fit on
the paper
Look at the left hand side of each line
If it is full standard, the rectangles height should be 2 big squares
If it is half standard, the rectangles height is only 1 big square You will
need to double all the waves to normalize them
b) What is the paper speed?
The standard speed is 25mm/sec
That means :
each little box is 0.04 seconds
each big box is 0.2 seconds
5 large box=25 mm=1 seconds
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3. Rate
a) Normal, Fast or Regular Rates
Find 2 adjacent R waves, count the number of big squares between the Rs
Divide 300 by the number of big squares this is your rate
4. Rhythm
a) Analysis
Is the rhythm sinus?
Sinus rhythm:
Is there a P wave before each QRS complex?
Is there a QRS complex after every P wave?
Are the P waves upright in leads I, II, III?
Do all P waves should look the same?
Are all P wave axis normal (0 to +90)?
Are the PR intervals constant?
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Premature
Atrial
Contraction
(PAC)
Premature
Ventricular
Contraction
(PVC)
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5. Axis
Axis is the conduction flow of the heart
Normal axis varies with age i.e. newborns have a right axis deviation
because the left and right ventricles are the same size due to fetal circulation
Look at the QRS complex of Lead I and Lead aVF
Is the QRS complex of Lead I more negative (downgoing or conduction away
from the lead) or positive (upgoing or conduction towards the lead)?
Is the QRS complex of Lead aVF more negative or positive?
Asd
Vsd
Normal
RVH
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Second degree heart block, Mobitz type I (Wenckeback phenomenon). Note how the
baseline PR interval is prolonged, and then further prolongs with each successive beat, until
a QRS complex is dropped.
7.QRS Complex
If beginning of Q to end of S is longer than 2-3 small squares =
bundle branch block, hyperkalaemia or sodium-channel blockade
Look for the M sign in either V1 or V6
If the M is on V1 = Right bundle branch block (RBBB)
1. Aortic stenosis
2. Hypertension
3. Dilated cardiomyopathy
4. Hyperkalaemia
5. Digoxin toxicity
If the M is on V6 = Left bundle branch block (LBBB)
1. Right ventricular hypertrophy / cor pulmonale
2. Pulmonary embolus
3. Rheumatic heart disease
4. Myocarditis or cardiomyopathy
5. Congenital heart disease (e.g. atrial septal defect)
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8.QTc Interval
Beginning of Q to end of T
QT corrected interval for heart rate because as HR decrease, QT lengthens
and vice versa
Normal: <0.45 (<6 months), <0.44 (>6 months)
QTc = QT / square root of RR interval
prolonged QT:
1. long QT syndrome
2. hypokalemia
3. hypomagnesemia
4. hypocalcemia
5. neurologic injury
Prolonged QT predisposes to ventricular tachycardia and associated with
sudden death
9.T wave
peaked, pointed T = hyperkalemia, LVH
flattened T waves = hypokalemia, hypothyroidism
10.Ventricular Hypertrophy
Right ventricular hypertrophy
R wave >98% in V1 or S wave >98% in I or V6
Increased R/S ratio in V1 or decreased R/S in V6
RSR in V1 or V3R in the absence of complete RBBB
Upright T wave in V1 (>3 days)
Presence of Q wave in V1, V3R, V4R
causes of RVH: ASD, TAPVR, pulmonary stenosis, TOF, large VSD with
pulmonary H
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Fixed prolonged
PR
no missed beat
variable
prolonged PR
no missed beat
Fixed prolonged
PR
with missed beat
Variable
prolonged PR
with missed beat
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