CHAPTER 22 Electrocardiography
3 Is electrocardiography sensitive or insensitive for detecting chamber enlargement and hypertrophy?
5 An adult has a large R wave in V1. What is the differential diagnosis?
Right ventricular hypertrophy (look for associated right axis deviation, right atrial enlargement, and right ventricular (RV) strain with ST-T abnormalities)
6 What leads are most helpful when looking for a bundle-branch block?
The QRS duration should be more than 120 ms to identify a bundle-branch block. Not every wide QRS is a bundle-branch block; the differential diagnosis also includes a ventricular beat, intraventricular conduction delay, hyperkalemia, drug effect, and WPW with conduction through an accessory pathway.
7 What are the characteristics of a right bundle-branch block?
Patients with RBBB typically have an rSR′ pattern in V1 and a broad terminal S wave in I and V6 (Figure 22-1).
9 What are the characteristics of a left bundle-branch block?
In V1 there is a broad, deep S wave (or QS wave), with ST segment elevation, that may be preceded by a very narrow R wave (Figure 22-2). In lead I there is a broad R wave (sometimes notched) without a Q or S wave.
11 You are attempting to pass a Swan-Ganz catheter into the pulmonary artery in a patient with LBBB. When the hemodynamic tracing suggests that the catheter tip is in the right ventricle, the patient suddenly becomes bradycardic, with a heart rate of 25. What happened?
12 Does a normal ECG exclude the possibility of severe coronary artery disease?
For an example of ECG findings noted in a patient with exertional angina, see Figure 22-3.