Ventricular Arrhythmias-Classification, Etiology, ECG, Clinical Characteristics, Treatment
Ventricular Arrhythmias-Classification, Etiology, ECG, Clinical Characteristics, Treatment
Ventricular Arrhythmias-Classification, Etiology, ECG, Clinical Characteristics, Treatment
Conduction system
SA node- primary pacemaker of heart, normal beat initiated by SA node, inherent rate 60-100BPM= P wave
Internodal and inter-atrial pathways
AV node- Located in septum of heart, inherent 40-60 BPM, represents PR segment of QRS complex
Bundle of his- represents ventricles depolarizing, origin of all ventricular rhythms, inherent rate 20-40 BPM
Perkinje fibers
Classification of RCD
1. Disorders in Automatism
2. Disorders in excitation
Supraventricular
Ventricular
3. conduction disorders
SA block and inter-atrial block
BBB( left and right)
4. Pre-excitation syndromes (conducting a pathological link)
-Fusion beat(left red arrow)- p-wave infront of PVC and PVC is narrower than other PVCs- indicates the
beat is product of both sinus node and ectopic ventricular focus.
-Capture beat- complex is narrow enough to suggest normal ventricular conduction- indicates that atrial
impulse has made it through and conduction of ventricles is relatively normal.
2. Ventricular tachycardia- ≥ 3 consecutive ectopic beats at rate of > 100 bpm, originate in the ventricles
Non-sustained <30secs
Sustained >30secs
Most patients have significant heart diseases – CAD, previous MI, Cardiomyopathy
ECG
Rates range from 100-250 BPM
P waves often dissociated as seen (arrow)
AV dissociation- when Atria and ventricles Act indecently, due additional Ventricular focus
Mechanisms of VT
o Reentrant- Reentrant ventricular arrhythmias
Premature ventricular complexes
Idiopathic left ventricular tachycardia
Bundle branch reentry
Ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation when associated with chronic heart disease- due previous MI and
cardiomyopathy
o Automatic- Automatic Ventricular arrhythmias
Premature ventricular complexes
Ischemic ventricular tachycardia
Ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation when associated with Acute medical conditions
Acute MI or ischemia
Electrolyte and Acid-base disturbances, hypoxemia
Increased sympathetic tone and drugs
o Triggered- Triggered activity ventricular arrythmias
Pause- dependent triggered activity
Early after depolarization (phase 3)- due hypokalemia etc
Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia
Catechol- dependent triggered activity
Late after depolarization (phase 4) – due local catecholamines, hypercalcemia, digitalis
intoxication
Idiopathic right ventricular tachycardia
2b. Idioventricular tachycardia- enhanced idioventricular rhythm, manifests when rate = sinus rate, characterized by
Bizarre QRS complexes/ fusion beats
Rapid idioventricular rate (70-80BPM)
AV dissociation and capture beats
Absence of pacemaker protection-abolished by faster sinus
rhythm
ECG clues for Diagnosis of Ventricular tachycardia
Av dissociation (capture beats, fusion beats)
Concordance of QRS complex in all precordial leasa
Front plane : LAD with QRS > 140 ms
Precordial leads: RS pattern, onset of R to Nadir of S > 100ms
RBBB pattern with
o V6: QS or dominant S
o V1: R> R’
o V1: Monophasic R or biphasic qR or R/S with initial deflection
different from sinus initiated QRS
LBBB pattern with
o Right axis: negative deflection in V1> V6
o V6: qR or QS
o V1: R > 40ms
o
3. Ventricular flutter- very rapid and REGULAR ectopic ventricular discharge
Mechanism- caused by re-entry with frequency of 300 BPM ventricles depolarizing in a circular pattern
minimal CO
ECG shows
Grossly abnormal intraventricular conduction- QRS and deflexions are very wide and bizarre, one merging
with another
Difficult to define QRS complex, ST segment and T-wave
continuous sine-like waveform
Atrial frequency 60-100 bpm
Ventricular frequency 150-300bpm
Regularity regular
Origin: ventricles
P-wave AV dissociation
4b. Ventricular flutter “Torsades De pointes”- twisting of point
Etiology- congenital long QT, Drugs- Quinidine, Phenothiazines, Hypokalemia/Hypomagnesaemia, 3 degree blocks
ECG shows
QRS bizarre and multiform
OQRS have sharply pointed apices- which are directed upwards for a short
period and then direct downward for a short period
QRS form and axis undulate
Multiform ventricular flutter
4. Ventricular Fibrillation- expression of chaotic, uncoordinated, ventricular depolarization. It is a terminal event
Etiology- IHD esp acute MI, Quinidine and digitalis intoxication esp with hypokalemia and hypothermia <28 C
Mechanism- Advanced physiological asymmetry of biventricular chamber such as in MI, or Premature/Rapid
stimulation of asymmetrical chambers e.g by PVCs, VT or V. flutter
ECG shows
Completely irregular, chaotic and deformed deflexion of varying height, width and shape
P-waves, QRS complexes, ST segments and T waves cannot be identified
Brugada Syndrome
RBB + persistent ST elevation in right precordial leads
Sudden cardiac death
3 patterns
Type1 – J point elevation with ST segment elevation ≥ 2 mV followed by negative -Twave
Type 2- saddle-back configuration of ST elevation > 0.2 mV – Downsloping ST elevation-
positive or biphasic T wave not touching baseline
Type 3- St elevation < 0.1 mV with either of morphologies
Long
term
therapy