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Assoc Prof Harry Mond
May 13, 2025
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Rhythm strips: I, II, V2, V6

What do you think?
In order to interpret the ECG, let us start by reviewing the ventricular ectopic.

In summary:
A ventricular ectopic has a
Now, let us return to our ECG.

Sinus rhythm with ventricular ectopics every sixth beat (red highlight).
Ventricular hexageminy. Rarely reported in the literature, not necessarily because it is rare but rather long strips are required to make the diagnosis.
What bugs me is that some examples in the literature only have two ventricular ectopics (yellow highlight) with 5 sinus beats between (red highlight) and therefore we do not know if it is really a single sequence or a true run.
Therefore, In order to diagnose ventricular hexageminy, we require at least two sequences or three ectopics.
Let us review the various ventricular “geminy” groupings.
Ventricular bigeminy: Ventricular ectopic every second beat (red highlight).

Ventricular trigeminy: Ventricular ectopic every third beat (red highlight).

Ventricular quadrigeminy: Ventricular ectopic every fourth beat (red highlight}.

Ventricular pentageminy: Ventricular ectopic every fifth beat (red highlight).

Ventricular hexageminy: Ventricular ectopic every sixth beat (red highlight).

This ECG was reported as ventricular trigeminy with fusion.

What do you think?
There are two very late ventricular ectopics (red highlight) occurring after the P wave in the PR interval and are referred to as end diastolic. The next ventricular ectopic is later again (yellow highlight) and is fusion between the ventricular ectopic and the next sinus generated QRS. The coupling intervals differ and the ventricular ectopics have a fixed coupling interval between them. This is called ventricular parasystole and is easily confused with “geminy”grouping.
Ventricular parasystole:
ECG features:
Our tracing has all these criteria but to be absolutely sure, we need longer strips.
Here is another example which shows how difficult it is to confirm the diagnosis of ventricular parasystole.

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?