Download a free PDF copy!
To receive a free PDF copy of The Fundamentals of Electrocardiograph Interpretation by Harry Mond, subscribe to his email blog by entering your email address below.
Assoc Prof Harry Mond
December 2, 2024
To receive a free PDF copy of The Fundamentals of Electrocardiograph Interpretation by Harry Mond, subscribe to his email blog by entering your email address below.
Purchase a hard cover or paperback copy of The Fundamentals of Electrocardiograph Interpretation by Harry Mond on Amazon.
I was asked for an opinion on this ECG.

There is sequential shortening of the PR interval and no dropped beats.This is not AV dissociation or isorhythmic AV dissociation as the R to R intervals are different and related to the PR intervals.This is reversed Wenckebach and below is another example.

Reversed Wenckebach is a rare ECG finding where there is sequential shortening of the PR interval and when it reaches its shortest value, the sequence is repeated often without a dropped beat.When a dropped beat occurs, there may be syncope and a permanent pacemaker required.In the good old days this was an arrhythmia associated with digitalis toxicity.
Dr Harry Mond
July 9, 2026
No tricks. Just a selection of tracings from a Holter study.Look at each one carefully, use calipers, arrows and highlight and write down your conclusions.
July 2, 2026
I came across these two tracings from the same patient during Holter reporting. Do you agree with the reported diagnoses?
June 26, 2026
I was asked to review this Holter monitor, the report of which stated: “Sinus rhythm, ventricular rate ~ 90 bpm, Wenckebach AV block”. What do you think?