ECG S: A CASE-BASED APPROACH December 6,

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Transcription:

ECG S: A CASE-BASED APPROACH December 6, 2018 1

Faculty Disclosure Faculty: Lorne Gula MD, FRCPC Professor, Western University Cardiologist, Hearth Rhythm Specialist Director, Electrophysiology Laboratory, London, Ontario Damian Redfearn MB, ChB, MRCPI, FRCPC Heart Rhythm Service, Kingston General Hospital Relationships with commercial interests: Not Applicable Potential for conflict(s) of interest: Not Applicable 2

Mitigating Potential Bias All the recommendations involving clinical medicine are based on evidence that is accepted within the profession. Recommendations conform to the generally accepted standards. The presentation will mitigate potential bias by ensuring that data and recommendations are presented in a fair and balanced way. 3

Learning Objectives After active participation in the workshop participants will be able to diagnose the following conditions on ECG and review principles of clinical management: Bradycardia, conduction abnormalities, and tachycardia. Myocardial ischemia, acute and previous myocardial infarction. Other systemic disorders with ECG manifestations. 4

58 year old man, chest pressure, short of breath 1. Pericarditis 2. Acute inferior MI 3. Acute anterior MI 4. Ventricular tachycardia

58 year old man, chest pressure, short of breath 1. Pericarditis 2. Acute inferior MI 3. Acute anterior MI 4. Ventricular tachycardia

52 year old woman with sudden shortness of breath. Most concerning abnormality is 1. Right bundle branch block 2. AV delay 3. Anteroseptal infarction 4. Brugada sign

52 year old woman with sudden shortness of breath. Most concerning abnormality is 1. Right bundle branch block 2. AV delay 3. Anteroseptal infarction 4. Brugada sign

64 year old man, hypertension, diabetes, short of breath 1. Inferior MI 2. Left bundle branch block 3. Diffuse ischemia 4. Complete AV block 5. None of above

64 year old man, hypertension, diabetes, short of breath 1. Inferior MI 2. Left bundle branch block 3. Diffuse ischemia 4. Complete AV block 5. None of above

48 year old man, prior MI and stent, sudden chest pressure 1. Acute anterior MI 2. Acute inferior MI 3. Pericarditis 4. Ventricular tachycardia 1/2

48 year old man, prior MI and stent, sudden chest pressure 1. Acute anterior MI 2. Acute inferior MI 3. Pericarditis 4. Ventricular tachycardia 1/2

2/2

22 yo healthy young man, recent URTI, now having chest pain 1. Hyperkalemia 2. Intracranial bleed 3. Pericarditis 4. Acute MI

22 yo healthy young man, recent URTI, now having chest pain 1. Hyperkalemia 2. Intracranial bleed 3. Pericarditis 4. Acute MI

67 year old man, hypertension, routine assessment 1. Left bundle branch block 2. Right bundle branch block 3. Ventricular rhythm 4. Atrial fibrillation

67 year old man, hypertension, routine assessment 1. Left bundle branch block 2. Right bundle branch block 3. Ventricular rhythm 4. Atrial fibrillation

1/2 68 year old woman, fatigue and dizziness past 2 weeks. This patient is at risk of 1.Bradycardia 2. Tachycardia 3. Both 4. Neither

1/2 68 year old woman, fatigue and dizziness past 2 weeks. This patient is at risk of 1.Bradycardia 2. Tachycardia 3. Both 4. Neither

2/2

54 yo man preop hand surgery. What is the rhythm? 1. Sinus 2. Junctional 3. AF 4. Ventricular 5. A flutter

54 yo man preop hand surgery. What is the rhythm? 1. Sinus 2. Junctional 3. AF 4. Ventricular 5. A flutter

72 yo woman, fatigue, poor energy level. What is the diagnosis? 1. Bradycardia 2. Atrial fibrillation 3. Complete AV block 4. All of the above 5. None of the above

72 yo woman, fatigue, poor energy level. What is the diagnosis? 1. Bradycardia 2. Atrial fibrillation 3. Complete AV block 4. All of the above 5. None of the above

63 year old man known to the heart rhythm service. Routine assessment. The rhythm is 1. Sinus with PVCs 2. AF with PVCs 3. AF with pacing 4. Idioventricular

63 year old man known to the heart rhythm service. Routine assessment. The rhythm is 1. Sinus with PVCs 2. AF with PVCs 3. AF with pacing 4. Idioventricular

62 year old man, referred by sleep clinic for rhythm assessment. The conduction disturbance is most likely 1. In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

62 year old man, referred by sleep clinic for rhythm assessment. The conduction disturbance is most likely 1. In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

71 year old woman, 2 episodes of syncope. The conduction disturbance is most likely 1.In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

71 year old woman, 2 episodes of syncope. The conduction disturbance is most likely 1.In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

2 AV block Some p waves conduct, some don t Within AV node Mobitz 1 ( Wenckebach ) pattern: Gradually prolonging PR until dropped QRS narrow QRS long-ish PR even on first beat of sequence) Low risk of worsening block/bradycardia Distal conduction system (below AV node) Mobitz II pattern: Constant PR with intermittently dropped QRS normal PR when conducted slightly wide QRS High risk of worsening block/bradycardia

2:1 AV conduction. The conduction disturbance is most likely 1.In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

2:1 AV conduction. The conduction disturbance is most likely 1.In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

The conduction disturbance is most likely 1.In the sinus node 2. In the AV node 3. In the distal conduction system 4. In the His Bundle

The AV conduction disturbance is 1.First degree AV delay 2. Second degree AV block 3. Complete AV block 4. Need more info

The AV conduction disturbance is 1.First degree AV delay 2. Second degree AV block 3. Complete AV block 4. Need more info

For clearer diagnosis it would be helpful to 1.Cardiovert 2. Pace 3. Intubate 4. Give adenosine

For clearer diagnosis it would be helpful to 1.Cardiovert 2. Pace 3. Intubate 4. Give adenosine

43 yo man, renal impairment, no coronary history 1. Hypokalemia 2. Left bundle branch block 3. Diffuse ischemia 4. Hyperkalemia 5. Hypocalcemia

43 yo man, renal impairment, no coronary history 1. Hypokalemia 2. Left bundle branch block 3. Diffuse ischemia 4. Hyperkalemia 5. Hypocalcemia

32 yo woman, syncope. Mild sharp pleuritic pain. 1. Hyperkalemia 2. Intracranial bleed 3. Brugada syndrome 4. Acute MI

32 yo woman, syncope. Mild sharp pleuritic pain. 1. Hyperkalemia 2. Intracranial bleed 3. Brugada syndrome 4. Acute MI

Wilde et al Circ 2002 ;106 :2514 Brugada Syndrome

Asymptomatic CCU patient needs immediate 1. Thrombolytic 2. Defibrillation 3. Nitro 4. Telemetry adjustment 5. Inotropes

Asymptomatic CCU patient needs immediate 1. Thrombolytic 2. Defibrillation 3. Nitro 4. Telemetry adjustment 5. Inotropes

Clues to artifact Messy baseline QRS tracks through at regular rate Nonphysiologic intervals No pause after resolution

1/2 35 yo woman, stable but palpitations 1. AV node reentry 2. AV reentry (WPW) 3. Preexcited AF 4. VT 5. Need more info

1/2 35 yo woman, stable but palpitations 1. AV node reentry 2. AV reentry (WPW) 3. Preexcited AF 4. VT 5. Need more info

2/2 Same patient, after adenosine. SVT was most likely 1. AV node reentry 2. AV reentry (WPW) 3. Atrial tachycardia 4. VT 5. Need more info

2/2 Same patient, after adenosine. SVT was most likely 1. AV node reentry 2. AV reentry (WPW) 3. Atrial tachycardia 4. VT 5. Need more info

1/2 30 yo woman, stable with palpitations. Initial tx: 1. Verapamil 2. Atenolol 3. Isoproterenol 4. Procainamide 5. Cardioversion

1/2 30 yo woman, stable with palpitations. Initial tx: 1. Verapamil 2. Atenolol 3. Isoproterenol 4. Procainamide 5. Cardioversion

2/2 Sinus rhythm AF

68 yo man, stable with palpitations. Most likely: 1. VT 2. SVT with BBB 3. Pre-excited tachycardia 4. Paced 5. Artifact

68 yo man, stable with palpitations. Most likely: 1. VT 2. SVT with BBB 3. Pre-excited tachycardia 4. Paced 5. Artifact

63 yo man, no cardiac history, stable with palpitations. Initial medication: 1. Verapamil 2. Amiodarone 3. Adenosine 4. Heparin 5. Procainamide

63 yo man, no cardiac history, stable with palpitations. Initial medication: 1. Verapamil 2. Amiodarone 3. Adenosine 4. Heparin 5. Procainamide

54 yo man, no cardiac history, palpitations. Cause of palpitations: 1. AV node pathology 2. PVCs 3. PACs 4. Sinus node dysfunction

54 yo man, no cardiac history, palpitations. Cause of palpitations: 1. AV node pathology 2. PVCs 3. PACs 4. Sinus node dysfunction

42 yo man, no cardiac history, recent echo normal. Stable with palpitations. 1. SVT with RBBB 2. Pre-excited tachycardia 3. VT 4. Pacing

42 yo man, no cardiac history, recent echo normal. Stable with palpitations. 1. SVT with RBBB 2. Pre-excited tachycardia 3. VT 4. Pacing

This pacemaker has: 1. One lead 2. Two leads 3. Three leads 4. Can t tell

This pacemaker has: 1. One lead 2. Two leads 3. Three leads 4. Can t tell

This pacemaker has: 1. One lead 2. Two leads 3. Three leads 4. Can t tell

This pacemaker has: 1. One lead 2. Two leads 3. Three leads 4. Can t tell

Biventricular pacemaker 1. Undersensing 2. Normal 3. Oversensing 4. Failure to capture

Biventricular pacemaker 1. Undersensing 2. Normal 3. Oversensing 4. Failure to capture

Questions/Discussion Lorne Gula, MD Director, Heart Rhythm Ablation Lab, London, Ontario Damian Redfearn, MB, ChB, MRCPI Director, Heart Rhythm Service, Kinston, Ontario

Questions? Lorne Gula, MD Director, Heart Rhythm Ablation Lab, London, Ontario Damian Redfearn, MB, ChB, MRCPI Heart Rhythm Service, Kinston, Ontario 104