Electrocardiographic leads.
The electrocardiogram (ECG) records from the body surface and registers the differences in electrical potential generated by the heart. The signal recorded is determined by action potentials generated by millions of individual cells and their sequence of activation. A multitude of factors, both cardiac and extracardiac, alter the final electrical signal. For instance, the electrical forces generated by the heart are subsequently altered by the position of the heart within the body, the nature of the intervening tissue, and the distance to the recording electrode. Since the final, recorded electrical signal does not faithfully reflect the electrical activity of individual cells, the student should not expect the ECG necessarily to provide an exact anatomic or physiologic: "picture" of the heart. Nevertheless, as the result of careful correlation of electrocardiographic patterns with observed anatomic, pathologic, and physiologic data, it is now possible to deduce, with a high grade of accuracy, the state of the heart from the surface ECG. While it is true that the ECG may be normal despite an abnormal heart, or abnormal with a normal heart, it is equally true that the ECG often provides an important indication of a cardiac abnormality, and even allows a fairly accurate appraisal of the anatomic and physiologic significance of that abnormality. Furthermore, the ECG is by far the best method of analysis of disturbances of the cardiac rhythm.
The frontal plane ECG is recorded from the supine, resting patient by attaching an electrode to each of the four extremities (Figure 33.1
The V1 electrode position is located in the fourth right intercostal space adjacent to the sternum. The V2, electrode position is located in the fourth left intercostal space adjacent to the sternum. The V3 electrode position is located at the midpoint of a line connecting the electrode position for V2 and electrode position for V4. The V4 electrode position is located in the fifth left intercostal space in the midclavicular line. The V5 electrode position is located at the same level as the electrode position for V4 on the anterior axillary line. The V6 electrode position is located at the same level as the electrode positions for V4 and V5 on the midaxillary line. In each instance, the electrode serves as a positive pole, with the negative pole formed by electrically connecting all the limb leads so that an electrical current moving toward one of the precordial leads will be reflected as an upward deflection on the recording. Conversely, a vector moving toward the right posterior chest will be reflected as a negative deflection in the left anterior precordial leads. Thus, even though no electrodes are placed on the right posterolateral chest, vectors moving in any direction within the 360° of the horizontal plane will still be reflected in the six selected precordial leads.
The ECG instrument records each lead separately, either sequentially or, in some instruments, several leads can be recorded simultaneously. As the stylus moves, depending on the voltage it is reflecting, the recording paper moves at a constant, present speed of 25 mm/sec. Hence time is represented on the recording paper by the horizontal axis, and voltage is reflected in the vertical axis.
ECG grid. Waves, intervals, segments.
By convention, the first upward deflection from the baseline is termed the P wave, and it reflects atrial depolarization. The P wave should not exceed 2.5 mm in height nor 0.11 second in width (i.e., less than three small boxes high and wide).
Ventricular depolarization is represented by the QRS complex. The Q wave is the first negative deflection from the baseline after the P wave, but preceding an upward deflection. Normally, the Q wave reflects ventricular septal depolarization, and its duration does not exceed 0.03 second. The R wave is the first positive deflection after the P wave, reflecting depolarization of the ventricular mass. The S wave is the negative deflection following the positive R wave representing later ventricular depolarization. Any positive deflection following an S wave is labeled R′ (read "R-prime"); any negative deflection following an R′ is labeled S′. By convention, an uppercase R or S infers a large deflection, whereas a lowercase r or s infers a smaller deflection.
The T wave reflects repolarization of the ventricle and may be represented as either a positive or negative deflection following the QRS complex. The area incorporated within the T wave approximates that within the QRS complex, and its polarity is roughly the same as the principal QRS polarity.
Occasionally, another wave, the U wave, may follow the T wave, and it is generally of the same polarity as the T wave. The mechanism of the U wave is unknown, though it may reflect repolarization of papillary muscles, or simply represent an afterpotential.
The PR interval is the time from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS, whether initiated by a Q or an R, and this interval indicates the time required for the atria to depolarize, and for the electrical current to conduct through the atrioventricular node and bundle branches until the ventricle depolarizes. The QRS interval is that interval from the beginning of the Q wave to the end of the S wave, incorporating ventricular depolarization. The QT interval is the time from the beginning of the Q wave to the end of the T wave, incorporating both ventricular depolarization and repolarization.
The PR segment is that portion of the recording between the end of the P wave and the beginning of the QRS. The ST segment is that portion of the recording, generally represented by a horizontal line, from the end of ventricular depolarization, whether represented by an R wave or an S wave, to the beginning of the T wave.
In order to understand the mechanism of the recorded electrocardiographic patterns, it is essential to appreciate first of all the genesis of a single action potential; the derivation of the surface tracing from the cardiac cells; and the sequence of activation of the heart.
Genesis of cellular action potential.
The cell remains in this negative or polarized state until, by one of two mechanisms, its negativity is reduced (it becomes more positive) to the threshold potential. The threshold potential is that potential at which the membrane's permeability to sodium is altered such that the cell can depolarize. Since the positive sodium ions move rapidly into the negative cell, the inside of the cell becomes more positive. In fact, before the sodium influx is arrested, the intracellular potential becomes absolutely positive, manifested by the so-called overshoot. This phase of depolarization is followed by restitution of the intracellular potential to normal—the phase of repolarization—which is accomplished by a loss of the positive intracellular potassium ion. Repolarization includes an early slow phase, termed the plateau, which is the result of a relative balance between the diminishing, inward calcium current and an increasing, outward potassium current, and a later rapid phase, due principally to potassium efflux.
These phases of the action potential are numbered: Phase 0 depicts depolarization; phase 1 refers to the overshoot or spike; phase 2 numbers the slow phase of repolarization; and phase 3 is the rapid phase of repolarization.
It is important to understand this transmembrane action potential, both because the surface electrocardiogram is derived from it and because arrhythmias result from changes in the action potential of one or several cells.
Recall that in order for the cell to propagate a transmembrane action potential, or depolarize, its resting potential must be brought to threshold. There are two mechanisms by which this may be accomplished. The first, and simplest, is electrically to stimulate the cell from an outside source. If the stimulus is too weak, the resting potential will be reduced but not to threshold, so no depolarization will occur. If the stimulus is sufficiently strong to reduce the resting potential to threshold, then a transmembrane action potential is propagated. Nearly all the cells in the heart are depolarized in this fashion; each cell is stimulated externally by its neighboring cell.
Reentry
Unidirectional block and slowed conduction in reentry pathway.
Ladder diagram illustrating supraventricular tachycardia due to AV nodal reentry:
A = atrial depolarization.
A′ = ectopic atrial excitation.
A″ = a second ectopic atrial excitation.
V = ventricle.
P = normal atrial activation on surface ECG.
P′ = ectopic premature atrial complex.
P″ = a second premature atrial complex.
Ladder diagram illustrating "warm-up" of automatic supraventricular tachycardia.
Two conditions must prevail for reentry to occur. First, the impulse must leave the selected segment to conduct through other cardiac muscle. If the impulse that depolarized the first cell had conducted through the remainder of the heart, then the neighboring cells would be refractory; conduction into the circus pathway would not be possible. In other words, for the circus pathway to be excitable, the initial wave of depolarization must not have reached that pathway—that is, there must be unidirectional block (block forward into the reentry pathway, but not retrograde) into this portion of the pathway. Without unidirectional block, reentry would not have been possible.
Second, there must be a slowing in conduction. The heart requires about ⅓ second to recover, or to become re-excitable. If the impulse travels at a speed of 3 m/sec, which is about the speed of conduction expected in a Purkinje network, then the impulse would travel ⅓ sec × 3 m/sec, or 1 m before reentering the cell. Of course, the heart is not that large. So the only alternative explanation is that conduction must have been remarkably slowed.
Slowing in conduction is easily recognized at the level of the AV node by measuring the PR segment on the surface electrocardiogram. Thus, reentry can often be diagnosed or inferred from the surface electrocardiogram when reentry develops in the AV junction. On the other hand, slowing in conduction and reentry may not be so easily recognized in other portions of the heart.
Accelerated idioventricular rhythm due to augmented automaticy.
Depolarization and repolarization vectors.
Once that segment of muscle depolarizes, it must repolarize. If repolarization were in the same direction—that is, from endocardium to epicardium, but represented by the reinstitution of cell negativity, then the repolarization wave reflected on the surface tracing would be reflected in an identical complex, but in the opposite direction. In fact, repolarization of the ventricle travels in the opposite direction from depolarization, probably as a result of a delay in repolarization of the endocardium due to the intraluminal left ventricular cavity pressure. In addition, repolarization is slower than depolarization. Hence, repolarization, as reflected on the surface electrocardiogram, is slower, but in the same direction as depolarization. In general terms, however, the area subtended under the QRS complex approximately equals that under the T wave.
Sequence of activation of the heart, with resultant vectors.
The wave of depolarization conducts slowly from the atrium through the AV node into the bundle of His and the bundle branches. Again, the electricity generated by these tiny structures is insufficient to be recorded on the surface, so, instead, the isoelectric PR interval is recorded.
Having conducted through the AV conducting system to reach the ventricles, the wave of activation reaches a terminal portion of the shorter left bundle and hence the ventricular muscle on the left side of the septum before reaching the termination of the longer right bundle. Hence, the interventricular septum is first depolarized from left to right (Vector 1), reflected in an upward deflection in the right precordial leads (V1), but a negative deflection in the left precordial leads (V6). This initial wave of ventricular depolarization may be either superior (Vector 1a) or inferior (Vector 1b), so that either a small q or an r may be recorded in leads II, III, and aVF
Following phases 0 and 1 of the multiple transmembrane action potentials, the plateau or slow phase of repolarization (phase 2) is manifested on the surface ECG as the isoelectric ST segment. With more rapid repolarization, more apparent over the left ventricle than the right, the T wave is inscribed, subtending an area about equal to the QRS, but slower and more drawn out, and, in general, pointing in approximately the same direction as the QRS.
The normal electrocardiogram begins with a P wave, reflecting depolarization of the atria, generally from right to left, and inferiorly. Thus, the atrial activation is represented on the surface electrocardiogram by a P wave that is upright in leads I, II, and III. Terminal negativity in the precordial lead V1 is normal, and represents later depolarization of the posteriorly located left atrium. The amplitude of the P wave should not exceed 2.5 mm (0.25 mv), and its duration should not exceed 0.11 second (less than three small boxes). The P wave may be notched, indicating separate right and left atrial activation.
The PR segment is generally isoelectric. This segment may be deflected, however, by repolarization abnormalities of the atria, such as that resulting from atrial infarction or pericarditis.
The normal PR interval measures between 0.12 and 0.20 second.
The duration of the QRS complex measures between 0.06 and 0.10 second. The Q wave should not exceed 0.03 second, and its depth generally does not exceed 3 mm. The height of the R wave generally does not exceed 20 to 25 mm. The frontal axis of the QRS complex measures between −30° and 105°, indicating that the complex is principally positive in both lead I and lead II. The normal sequence of activation of the ventricle requires an rS in V1, gradually progressing into a larger R toward the left precordium, and a smaller S. A small q wave is generally recorded in the left limb and precordial leads, reflecting left to right septal activation.
The T wave generally points in the same direction as the QRS; the mean T vector should not be more than 30 to 45° divergent from the mean QRS vector. The area subtended by the T wave approximates that included within the QRS complex as well.
The normal QT interval is dependent upon heart rate. With the normal heart rate of approximately 70 cpm, the QT interval measures approximately 0.4 second. The QT interval can be corrected for heart rate (QT0) according to Bassett's formula:

Alternatively, add 0.02 second to 0.40 second for every decrement in the heart rate below 70 cpm by 10 beats; or subtract 0.02 second from 0.40 second for every 10-beat increment in heart rate above 70 cpm to calculate a normal QT interval for that heart rate. Simpler yet is the observation that the QT interval generally measures less than one-half the RR interval.
The ST segment is normally isoelectric, and divergence of the ST interval from baseline often indicates clinically significant abnormalities. The ST interval is generally not of clinical significance unless the QT interval is foreshortened or prolonged, as, for example, with hyper- or hypocalcemia. respectively.
To determine axis, visually calculate the area subtended by the positive and negative QRS deflections, and algebraically sum them. If the area is principally upright in lead I, then right axis deviation is excluded; right axis deviation is defined as an axis greater than 105°, which would be reflected by a principally negative deflection in lead I. Similarily, if the QRS complex in lead II is principally positive, then left axis deviation is excluded since, by definition, left axis deviation is to the left or negative side of − 30°, which is perpendicular to lead II. In other words, the student can immediately determine that the axis is normal by simply observing principally upright deflections in both leads I and II. Left axis deviation will be diagnosed by an S wave exceeding the R wave in lead II; right axis deviation will be diagnosed by the S wave exceeding the R wave in lead I. One may calculate the QRS axis more precisely by determining the relative positivity–negativity in each of the limb leads, and hence placing the resultant vector.
The heart rate may be slow (less than the arbitrarily defined lower limit of 60 cpm) for one of two reasons: The atria are slow—atrial bradycardia; or there is a block in conduction between the atria and ventricles—atrioventricular or AV block.
Sinus exit block. 2:1 (2 dots), 3:1 (3 dots), arid 4:1 (4 dots) sinus exit block. In the bottom trace, each pause is terminated by a junctional escape followed by a sinus capture ("escape–capture bigeminy"), which conducts aberrantly due to the Ashman phenomenon. Reproduced with permission from the Journal of the Indiana State Medical Association, March 1977, pages 123–129.
Differentiation of supraventricular from ventricular bradycardias: A = atria; V = ventricle; RB = right bundle branch; LB = left bundle branch.
The three degrees of Type I, AV nodal block: A. First degree. B. Second degree (Wenckebach). C. Third Degree, or complete AV dissociation. Note regular PP interval at rate of 75 bpm, and regular RR interval at rate of 55 bpm, the latter representing a junctional escape rhythm dissociated from the atrial rhythm.
Diagram of Wenckebach periodicity, utilizing Lewis diagram. The PP interval is constant at 1000 msec. The PR interval gradually increases, but by decreasing increments, i.e., the second PR exceeds the first by 200 msec; the third PR exceeds the second by 100 msec; the fourth PR exceeds the third by 50 msec; and the fifth P wave fails to conduct through the AV junction. As a result of the decremental increase in PR interval, the RR intervals decrease from 1200 to 1100 to 1050 msec, prior to the pause, which measures less than the 2000 msec incorporated in two PP intervals.
When block develops below the bifurcation of the bundle of His, at the level of the intraventricular conduction system, it is termed infra-His, bilateral bundle branch block, or Type II block. Clinically, it is well to recall that this is block at the level of the ventricles, so it may be termed ventricular block. Again, the block may develop in any of three degrees. First degree block, characterized by prolongation of the PR interval, is recognized by the coexistent prolongation in intraventricular conduction. Second degree block at this level is termed Mobitz II (Wenckebach block may also be referred to as Mobitz I). Mobitz II block is characterized by a constant PR interval until a P wave suddenly fails to conduct to the ventricle, with a resultant pause. Invariably, the QRS is prolonged with a bundle branch block pattern. Third degree, or complete block, at the level of the ventricles is characterized by an extraordinarily slow ventricular response, since any escape focus beneath this level of block has a very slow intrinsic rate.
First, second, and third degree infra-His, Type II block. Reproduced with permission from the Journal of the Indiana State Medical Association, March 1977, pages 123–129.
Conversely, if the block is at the level of the ventricles, it is never normal. The cause may be idiopathic degeneration of the cardiac skeleton and adjacent conducting system (Lev's disease), toxic amounts of certain drugs, or infarction of the anterior wall and interventricular septum. Depending upon the etiology, the prognosis may be much worse, with syncope or even death more likely to ensue when the cause is myocardial infarction. Vagolytic agents will not accelerate intraventricular conduction, and either catecholamines (as an emergency measure) or cardiac pacing may be indicated.
For instance, consider a single etiology: myocardial ischemia or infarction. With knowledge of the coronary arterial distribution and, more particularly, the coronary supply of the essential pacemaker and conducting sites in the heart, one can predict which bradycardia is likely to complicate a given myocardial infarction.
Blood supply to conducting system: (A) right sagittal view, (B) left sagittal view. Reproduced with permission from the Journal of the Indiana State Medical Association, March 1977, pages 123–129.
At the crux of the heart, where the RCA bends, it gives off another large branch in most hearts to nurture the AV node—the AV nodal artery. Rarely is the AV node infarcted and necrotic, but it is ischemic in the setting of acute inferior wall infarction. Even if the node, per se, were not ischemic, the area surrounding it is; this area contains a plethora of cholinergic ganglia, ischemia of which results in release of acetylcholine, thus mimicking vagal stimulation and slowing conduction through the AV node. The result may be either first, second, or third degree AV (Type I) block. Consequently, an inferior wall infarction is commonly associated with temporary, reversible ischemia of either the sinus node or AV node, resulting in any variety of supraventricular bradycardia. Unless the rate is extremely slow, no therapy is usually required.
Infra-His, Type II block resulting from acute anterior infarction. At 2:00 a.m., left bundle branch block is recorded (top). At 3:00 a.m., right bundle branch block is recorded (just below top). Note alternation between RBBB and LBBB in lead V5 at 3:00 a.m. (middle tracings). At 4:00 a.m., the monitor (in a V1 position) records two P waves conducting with LBBB. The third P wave fails to conduct (2°. type II Mobitz II block), followed by a brief period of 2:1 block (just above bottom tracing). Toward the end of the top trace at 4:00 a.m., the conduction reverts to RBBB for several complexes. Then, conduction fails altogether, so that many P waves are recorded without QRS, resulting in the death of the patient (lower tracing). Reproduced with permission from the Journal of the Indiana State Medical Association. March 1977, pages 123–129.
| Rate (A/V) | Rhythm | S1 | GSM | QRS duration | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSVT | 170–250/same | Regular | Constant "monotonous" | Termination or no change | Normal |
| Atrial flutter | 300/150 | Regular | Constant | ↓ Ventricular rate to 75 | Normal |
| Atrial fibrillation | 400–600/variable | Irregular | Varies | Transient slowing | Normal |
| Ventricular tachycardia | Variable/150–280 | Regular | Varies | No change | Prolonged |
Though overly simplistic, supraventricular tachycardias can generally be divided into three types: paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT), atrial flutter, and atrial fibrillation. PSVT commonly occurs in otherwise normal hearts. Atrial flutter and atrial fibrillation imply cardiac disease of a variety of types, including hypertensive, cardiomyopathic, ischemic, and valvular disease.
Three varieties of supraventricular tachycardia:
Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, initiated by a premature atrial complex. Subsequently, atrial activation is hidden in the QRS complex.
Atrial flutter. Note the atrial flutter waves in leads V1 and V2, at a rate of approximately 300 bpm, with 2:1 AV block and a resultant ventricular rate of 150 bpm.
Atrial fibrillation. The undulating baseline represents the atrial fibrillation, with an irregular, fairly rapid ventricular response.
Ventricular tachycardia is never normal, but complicates heart disease of all varieties, particularly ischemic and cardiomyopathic disease. Unlike most varieties of supraventricular tachycardia, ventricular tachycardia may be lethal. The prognosis depends on the underlying heart disease.
Commonly, the atria and ventricles are dissociated during ventricular tachycardia—that is, the atria continue to depolarize at a normal or slightly accelerated rate, for instance 100 cpm, whereas the ventricle is depolarized at a more rapid rate. This AV dissociation results in diagnostic: physical findings. When the right atrium contracts against a closed tricuspid valve (resulting from a preceding ventricular contraction), a retrograde, "cannon" a wave is seen in the jugular vein. Because of varying positions of the AV valves, dependent upon the timing of contraction of the chambers, the intensity of the first heart sound varies from beat to beat. If a ventricular contraction is preceded by an appropriately timed atrial contraction, the pulse and blood pressure will be higher than if inappropriate timing occurs. These three findings—cannon a waves, variable intensity of the first heart sound, and variations of the systolic blood pressure—are extremely helpful bedside hints as to the origin of the tachycardia.
Ventricular tachycardia. A tachycardia at 150 bpm with prolongation in QRS (0.12 sec) is recorded. The pattern of the QRS is RBBB (see V1). Note that atrial activation is dissociated from ventricular activations, best seen in leads I, V5, and V1 Study the second trace of V1, noting that every third complex is of shorter duration, resembling the normally conducted complex in lead V1 in sinus rhythm (recorded below). Each of these more normally conducted complexes is preceded by a P wave, and represents a capture of the ventricle by the preceding atrial activation. The reason for the repetition is the fortuitous ratio between atrial and ventricular rates. The atrial rate is 100 cpm, and the ventricular rate 150 cpm. Consequently, every third atrial activation captures the ventricle. Each of the "captured" complexes is actually a fusion between the supraventricular capture and the ventricular complex. Those on the left of the trace are more supraventricular in pattern, those on the right more ventricular, thus resembling the RBBB. (The tracing was kindly provided by Dr. Charles Fisch.)
Ventricular fibrillation, precipitated by the R on T phenomenon.
The clinical bedside findings may help to distinguish between the various tachycardias. More commonly, an EGG is essential to the differential diagnosis. If the duration of the QRS is narrow, one may be fairly certain that the tachycardia is supraventricular in origin. If the duration of the QRS is quite broad, one is approximately 95% certain that the tachycardia is ventricular in origin. On the other hand, approximately 5% of supraventricular tachycardias may conduct with prolonged QRS complexes. The explanation may be a preexistent bundle branch block or aberrant conduction of the rapid supraventricular complexes.
Thus, with a tachycardia and broad QRS, one must distinguish between a ventricular tachycardia and a supraventricular tachycardia conducting aberrantly. Aberrancy refers to abnormally prolonged, intraventricular conduction of an impulse of supraventricular origin. This is the result of an alteration in heart rate, a change in cycle length, or some other functional abnormality. Aberration does not refer to a fixed bundle branch block.
| SV1 aberrant | VT | |
|---|---|---|
| > 170 | Rate | 150 or fast |
| Regular or irregular | Rhythm | Regular |
| Long-short (Ashman) | Preceding pauses | Variable |
| Associated | A-V relation | Dissociated capture fusions |
| < 0.12 sec | QRS duration | > 0.14 sec |
| Triphasic in V1 (classical RBBB) | QRS configuration | Not classical RBBB |
Right bundle branch block. Vectors 1, 2, and 3 remain normal. Vector 4 explains the R′. right ventricular depolarization tacked on to the otherwise normal QRS.
Left bundle branch block.
Left anterior superior hemifascicular block (left anterior hemiblock).
Right ventricular hypertrophy.
Left ventricular hypertrophy.
Anterior myocardial infarction. The resultant vectors are all directed away from the infarcted area so that the exploring electrode looks through the electrically silent "window" into the lumen, to record negative complexes.
The pattern of right bundle branch block is:

Right bundle branch block. Note also the marked left axis deviation due to left anterior hemiblock and the prolongation in PR interval representing 1° block. The combination of these three findings may be representative of trifascicular block.
Recall that right bundle branch block may be functional, resulting from a supraventricular tachycardia or the Ashman phenomenon, when any delay in depolarization of the right bundle allows the left bundle to depolarize first.
The pattern of left bundle branch block is:

Left bundle branch block
The pattern of left anterior hemiblock is:

The left bundle is not actually a single bundle of conducting tissue, but divides into at least two fascicles or hemidivisions. The left anterior hemifascicle directs depolarization toward the left, anteriorly, and superiorly whereas the left posterior hemifascicle directs depolarization inferiorly and posteriorly.
With left posterior hemiblock, the exact opposite condition prevails, so that the qR is recorded in the inferior leads, and an rS in the anterolateral leads. Left posterior hemiblock is much, much less common than left anterior hemiblock.
The right ventricle is an anterior, right-sided structure, so right ventricular hypertrophy (RVH) results in a principal QRS vector directed toward lead V1. The ECG criteria for RVH are:

With congenital heart disease, one may suspect not only RVH but its precise anatomic cause. With diastolic or volume overload of the right ventricle, such as that resulting from atrial septal defect, an rSr′ is recorded in V1. The r′ is said to result from hypertrophy of the crista supraventricularis.
Right ventricular hypertrophy due to tetralogy of Fallot, with equalization of right and left ventricular pressures.
Right ventricular predominance due to mitral stenosis, with coexistent left atrial abnormality.
The pattern of left ventricular hypertrophy is:

Left ventricular hypertrophy.
Left atrial abnormality shows the following pattern:

Right atrial abnormality is characterized by:

Conversely, the earlier right atrial depolarization alters the initial P wave vector, not prolonging overall duration of the P wave but directing it interiorly so that the P wave is of normal duration, peaked, and taller than normal in the inferior leads.
| Anteroseptal | Anterior | Anterolateral |
|---|---|---|
| V1–2 | V3–4 (V4–6.) | V4–6 (I, L) |
| Inferior | Posterior | High Lateral |
| II, III. F | R in V1–2 | I, L |
(A) Anteroseptal myocardial infarction. Note QS in V2, q in V3, and terminal T wave inversion in V2–3. (B) Acute anterolateral myocardial infarction. Note ST segment elevation, tall T waves, and q waves in V4–6 and aVL.
Inferior–posterior myocardial infarction.
The electrocardiographic timing of myocardial injury.
In the Basic Science section, we discussed repolarizalion abnormalities accompanying electrolyte fluxes. An entire host of events can alter repolarization and hence the ST–T segment, including ischemia, hypoxemia, electrolyte abnormalities (potassium, calcium, magnesium), drugs (digitalis, antiarrhythmics, tricyclic antidepressants), and virtually any disease affecting the myocardium (myocarditis, cardiomyopathy, trauma, tumor). Thus, repolarization abnormalities are generally quite nonspecific and require clinical correlation for interpretation.
Pericarditis resulting from uremia. Note diffuse, concave upward, ST segment elevation over all epicardial leads.
Thus, the ECG is an extraordinarily useful method for evaluation of the state of the heart's structure, function, and rhythm.
The authors are indebted to Mr. Phillip Wilson, medical illustrator, and Mrs. Karen Deering, secretary, for their help.