ECG Made Easy
ECG Made Easy
ECG Made Easy
1
What the ECG is about
Recording an ECG 7
ECG interpretation 23
Things to remember 28
1 WHAT THE ECG IS ABOUT THE ELECTRICITY OF THE HEART/THE SHAPE OF THE ECG 1
cases it is crucial for patient management. It is, however,
important to see the ECG as a tool, and not as an end in Sinoatrial node
itself. Bundle of His
The ECG is essential for the diagnosis, and therefore Atrioventricular node
management, of abnormal cardiac rhythms. It helps with Left bundle branch
the diagnosis of the cause of chest pain, and the proper use
of thrombolysis in treating myocardial infarction depends Right bundle branch
upon it. It can help with the diagnosis of the cause of
breathlessness. Fig. 1.1 The wiring diagram of the heart
With practice, interpreting the ECG is a matter of pattern
recognition. However, the ECG can be analysed from
first principles if a few simple rules and basic facts are node’, or sometimes just ‘the node’). Thereafter, the
remembered. This chapter is about these rules and facts. electrical discharge travels very rapidly, down specialized
conduction tissue: first a single pathway, the ‘bundle of
His’, which then divides in the septum between the
THE ELECTRICITY OF THE HEART ventricles into right and left bundle branches. The left
bundle branch itself divides into two. Within the mass of
The contraction of any muscle is associated with electrical ventricular muscle, conduction spreads somewhat more
changes called ‘depolarization’, and these changes can be slowly, through specialized tissue called ‘Purkinje fibres’.
detected by electrodes attached to the surface of the body.
Since all muscular contraction will be detected, the electrical The rhythm of the heart
changes associated with contraction of the heart muscle will As we shall see later, electrical activation of the heart can
only be clear if the patient is fully relaxed and no skeletal sometimes begin in places other than the SA node. The
muscles are contracting. word ‘rhythm’ is used to refer to the part of the heart which
Although the heart has four chambers, from the electrical is controlling the activation sequence. The normal heart
point of view it can be thought of as having only two, rhythm, with electrical activation beginning in the SA node,
because the two atria contract together and then the two is called ‘sinus rhythm’.
ventricles contract together.
The wiring diagram of the heart (Fig. 1.1) THE SHAPE OF THE ECG
The electrical discharge for each cardiac cycle normally
starts in a special area of the right atrium called the The muscle mass of the atria is small compared with that of
‘sinoatrial (SA) node’. Depolarization then spreads the ventricles, and the electrical change accompanying the
through the atrial muscle fibres. There is a delay while contraction of the atria is therefore small. Contraction of
the depolarization spreads through another special area in the atria is associated with the ECG wave called ‘P’. The
2 the atrium, the ‘atrioventricular node’ (also called the ‘AV ventricular mass is large, and so there is a large deflection of 3
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R R R R
Q Q Q
S S
R–R interval:
(a) (b) (c) (d) (e) 5 large squares represent 1 s
Fig. 1.3 Parts of the QRS complex. (a) Q wave. (b, c) R waves. Fig. 1.4 Relationship between the squares on ECG paper and time.
(d, e) S waves Here, there is one QRS complex per second, so the heart rate is 60
beats/min
4 5
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1 300
2 150
3 100
4 75
5 60
6 50
Fig. 1.6 Duration of the QRS complex
2 2
3 3
4 4
V1 V6 V1 V6
V2 V5 V2 V5
V3 V4 V3 V4
Fig. 1.8 Positioning of the chest V leads. Note that the rib spaces are
numbered
LV V6
RV
V5 Calibration
A limited amount of information is provided by the height
V4 of the P waves, QRS complexes and T waves, provided
V1 V2 V3 the machine is properly calibrated. For example, small
complexes may indicate a pericardial effusion, and tall R
Fig. 1.9 The relationship between the six V leads and the heart
waves may indicate left ventricular hypertrophy (see Ch. 4).
10 A standard signal of 1 millivolt (mV) should move the stylus 11
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1 cm
S
S S
VL
VR I
I
III VF III II
I
S
Fig. 1.17 The cardiac axis is at right angles to this lead since the R
and S waves are of equal size
III II
V1
2
Fig. 1.20 Shape of the QRS complex: second stage 3
4
R V1 V6
V2 V5
Q V3 V4
V6
V1
Fig. 1.21 Shape of the QRS complex: third stage Fig. 1.22 The ECG patterns recorded by the chest leads
20 21
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22 23
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III VF V3 V6
24 25
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THINGS TO REMEMBER
Q S
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