17. EKG Evidence of Hypertrophy and Ischemia Flashcards

1
Q

How is the EKG evidence of hypertrophy and ischemia different than that of arrhythmias?

A
  • Primarily affects voltage (Y axis of EKG) rather than time (X axis)
  • Conditions persist for minutes to days and present in each complex unlike the on/off nature of arrhythmias
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2
Q

How does hypertrophy affect voltage?

A

Hypertrophy adds myocardial mass –> more voltage

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3
Q

How does death of myocardial tissue affect an EKG?

A
  • Diminish voltage

- Pathological Q waves

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4
Q

How does transient ischemia affect an EKG?

A

Delays & distorts repolarization –> elevates/depresses the ST segment

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5
Q

What is the significance of a flipped T wave?

A

“Soft indication” of ischemia

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6
Q

In what order is hypertrophy assessed?

A

RA –> LA –> RV –> LV

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7
Q

What characterizes RA enlargement on an EKG? Cause? What lead?

A

Extra mass “stacked” around the SA node produces a tall (>2.5 mm), peaked P wave in lead II

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8
Q

What characterizes LA enlargement on an EKG? Cause?

A
  • Adds mass far to the left of the SA node, making for a long P wave > 0.12 sec, often w/ a 0.04 sec “notch”
  • Commonly results from mitral valve abnormalities
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9
Q

What characterizes RV enlargement on an EKG?

A
  • A large upright R waves in lead I
  • R wave is greater than S wave in V1
  • Peaked, tall P wave in lead II
  • “Strain” pattern (inverted T wave, especially in V1 and V2)
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10
Q

What are the common causes of RV hypertrophy?

A
  • Increased pulmonary vascular resistance due to emphysema and other chronic pulmonary diseases
  • Pulmonary hypertension
  • Pulmonic valve disease
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11
Q

How is LV hypertrophy assessed on an EKG?

A

Scott’s Criteria:

  • measure the deepest S wave in lead V1 or V2 and add it to the tallest R wave in leads V5 or V6
  • a sum > 35 mm suggests LVH
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12
Q

Summarize the steps of analyzing an EKG for hypertrophy.

A
  1. Measure the P wave height in lead II: > 2.5 mm is RA hypertrophy
  2. Measure P wave duration in lead II: >/= 0.12 sec w/ notch is LA hypertrophy
  3. R taller than depth of S wave in lead V1 is RV hypertrophy
  4. Measure deepest S wave in V1 or V2 and add this to the tallest R wave in V5 or V6. > 35 mm is LV hypertrophy
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13
Q

What does the final diagnoses of chamber hypertrophy require?

A

Echocardiography

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14
Q

What distinguishes athletic LV hypertrophy from pathologic LV hypertrophy?

A
  • Athletic: LV hypertrophy only meets voltage criteria
  • Pathologic (due to valve disease, hypertension, cardiomyopathy): often have additional signs like axis deviation, atrial involvement, depolarization abnormalities like “strain” pattern of T wave
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15
Q

What are the 3 criteria that are examined in each lead for ischemia? What does each mean?

A
  • Pathologic Q waves > 0.03 sec suggest dead myocardium from an old MI
  • ST elevation > 1mm represents acute, transmural ischemia (MI is starting)
  • ST depression > 1mm represents sub-endocardial ischemia (reversible by lowering demand on the heart)
  • T wave inversions are a “soft” indication of ischemia
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16
Q

What are the 2 varieties of ST elevation?

A
  • Early repolarization

- Acute transmural ischemia

17
Q

What characterizes early repolarization on an EKG?

A
  • ST elevation that is seen in young athletes
  • Concave upward (nike swoosh)
  • Accompanied by other signs of athleticism
18
Q

What characterizes an acute transmural ischemia on an EKG?

A

ST elevation concave downward suggest an MI is starting

19
Q

In what leads are T waves allowed to be inverted? Why?

A

aVR, III, V1 b/c these are the only 3 leads whose (+) poles are to the right of the body’s mid-line