Review of Cardiac Anatomy
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Transcript Review of Cardiac Anatomy
Nursing 259
12 Lead EKG
Electrical Axis Determination
12 Lead EKG
Graphic recording of the electrical
potentials associated with the heartbeat
Electrical currents flow in different
directions so different views preferable
Each lead looks at different area of heart –
overall looks in frontal and vertical planes
Must be interpreted with client history,
physical assessment and lab data
Clinical Value of EKG
Myocardial
ischemia and infarction
Cardiac conduction disturbances
Arrhythmias
Cardiac chamber enlargement
Pericarditis
Pulmonary hypertension
Effects of cardiac drugs
Electrolyte disturbances
Practical Points
Effective contact between skin and
electrodes is essential; use electrode jelly
Proper grounding of machine and patient is
necessary to prevent AC interference
Other electrical equipment in contact with
patient may produce artifact
Patient should be in supine position with
arms at side of body
Pathway of Conduction
SA node
transmits impulse anteriorly
and inferiorly to AV node
Simultaneously conducted to L atrium
AV node to bundle of His
Septum activated from left to right
Simultaneously to ventricles - travels
more quickly over right ventricle as it
is thinner; left is thicker
Sequence of Activation
Conduction Pathway
Since
LV has larger muscle mass, mean
QRS vector is down and to left
If impulse is traveling towards the
positive electrode, a positive complex
is recorded in that lead
Conduction Pathway
If
impulse is traveling away from the
positive electrode ; a negative complex
is recorded in that lead
If impulse is traveling perpendicularly
to the positive electrode a very small or
biphasic complex will be recorded in
that lead
Mean QRS Vector
Conduction Pathway
Planes of Recording
Bipolar Limb Leads
Records
electrical potentials in the
frontal plane between 2 poles: 1
positive and 1 negative
+ electrode is recording electrode
Lead I: RA (-); LA (+)
Lead II: RA (-); LL (+)
Lead III: LA (-); LL (+)
Bipolar Limb Leads
Unipolar Limb Leads
Designated
limb is + electrode in
relation to center of heart which is
neutral; also in frontal plane
AVR - RA (+)
AVL - LA (+)
AVF - LL (+)
Unipolar Limb Leads
Unipolar Precordial Leads
Horizontal
view of electrical activity
+ electrode is electrode moved about
on chest wall
Leads V1-V6
Placement of precordial leads should
be precise since QRS morphology and
amplitude can change if inaccurate
Precordial Leads
V1 - 4th ICS - right sternal border
V2 - 4th ICS - left sternal border
V3 - midway between V2 and V4
V4 - 5th ICS - L midclavicular line
V5 - 5th ICS - L anterior axillary line
V6 - 5th ICS - L midaxillary line
Precordial Leads
Precordial Lead Views
V1 and V2 are septal leads
V2, V3 and V4 are anterior leads
V4, V5 and V6 are lateral precordial leads
Precordial Lead Views
R wave progression
V1
over right ventricle - impulse will
travel towards electrode and then away
- normal small R wave
V6 over left ventricle - impulse first
travels away from electrode and then
towards it - normally small Q wave and
large R wave
R wave progression
Between
V1 and V6 is transitional
zone - R wave should progressively
increase across V leads - called R wave
progression
Poor R wave progression is suggestive
of anterior wall MI since precordial
impulse flow is interrupted
R wave progression
Right Precordial EKG
Used in dextrocardia and right ventricular
infarctions
V1 and V2 - same site
V3R - halfway between V1 and V4R
V4R - 5th ICS - right midclavicular line
V5R - 5th ICS - right anterior axillary line
V6R - 5th ICS - right mid- axillary line
Right Precordial EKG
Electrical axis
Orientation of heart’s electrical activity in
frontal plane
Review: depolarization of ventricle : first
septum from left to right, then right
ventricle, then left ventricle
Mean QRS vector is down and to left
Positive complex, negative complex and
biphasic complex
Electrical axis
Hexaxial reference system: 6 limb leads
intersecting at common center point
Numerical designations are given to positive
and negative poles of each lead
Each lead divides the circle by 30 degrees
The upper half of the circle is negative and
the bottom half is positive
Divide the circle into quadrants
Normal electrical axis
Down and to left
From 0 to +90 (can vary from -30 to +110)
QRS should be predominantly positive in
Leads I and AVF - quadrant method
For normal axis: impulse must travel in
normal manner, normal muscle mass must
be maintained and all myocardium must be
able to conduct impulse
Normal Axis
Left Axis deviation
From -30 to -90
QRS: positive in Lead I & negative in AVF
Causes:
Left
atrial or ventricular hypertrophy
Left bundle branch block
Inferior wall MI
Pregnancy
Obesity
Left axis deviation
Right axis deviation
From +110 to +180
QRS: positive in AVF - negative in Lead I
Causes:
Right
ventricular hypertrophy
Anterior MI
Pulmonary disease
Thin person
Congenital heart disease
Right axis deviation
Indeterminate axis
- 90 to 180
Extreme right or left
Indeterminate axis
Perpendicular method
More accurate than quadrant method
First do quadrant method
Then look for smallest or most biphasic
complex - the axis is perpendicular to this
lead
Look at right angle to that lead to obtain
numerical value
Normal axis
QRS positive in I and AVF
Answer is between 0 - +90
AVL smallest QRS
Lead II is perpendicular to
AVL
Axis is +60
Left axis deviation
QRS + in I, - in AVF
Answer is between 0 and -90
Most biphasic is AVR
Lead III is perpendicular to
AVR
Axis is -60
Right axis deviation
QRS – in I, + in AVF
Answer is between +90 to 180
AVF and II are most biphasic
Leads I, AVL are perpendicular
Axis is between +150 - +180
Axis is +165
That’s a hard one!
Indeterminate axis
All leads are biphasic
Cannot determine!