What Do You Think 31

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What Do You Think 31

Author

Assoc Prof Harry Mond

Published

May 12, 2025

Urgent referral to pacemaker clinic:

AV block with failure to pace in the ventricle and 1.7second pause.

What do you think?

There is atrial pacing with a prominent stimulus artefact (SA), a P wave (P) and normal AV conduction (QRS/T).

On the bottom tracing, leadII, the baseline is isoelectric and flat (red arrow) apart from the stimulus artefact. There is no T wave from the previous QRS (red highlight), no P wave (yellow highlight) and no QRS (blue highlight) with the next beat.

 

This is clearly an ECG artefact, where the recording has been wiped or maybe filtered. I do not understand the mechanism with modern ECG and Holter monitor machines. In past years, it was not unusual with tape-based Holter monitors and probably related to fluctuations in the power source.  

Most early single channel ECG machines had an “instow” switch, which if activated would act as a filter for artefact. At that time, most pacing systems were unipolar, and the ventricular stimulus artefact would result in gross filtering for 400 ms.

Unipolar ventricular pacing.

Instow is ON, and the QRS/T waves are filtered for 400 ms after the stimulus artefact in leads I and II, but not in III. When turned OFF, theQRS/T waves are now seen.

 

Here is another example of filtering. Note it is not the stimulus artefact causing this.

The baseline is isoelectric from the end of the T wave to the next T wave (red arrow). In leads I, II, andIII there is no P wave and QRS (red highlight) for one beat.

With non-paced rhythms, it is most common just to see a single “lost” QRS and sometimes a T wave (red highlight).

When the T wave is included, it can be very difficult to differentiate the “lost” QRS/T from Wenckebach AV block.

Above: Lost QRS/T wave with isoelectric flat baseline (red arrow). The PR interval before and after the pause are the same (red highlight).

Below: Wenckebach AV block. The PR interval before the lost beat is longer than after the dropped beat.

The ECG glitches described are electronic and may be related to filtering. There is another type of ECG glitch which is mechanical and related to uneven paper delivery or “sticky” rollers.

ECG sinus rhythm with uneven paper delivery due to “sticky” rollers. Normal complex (red highlight). The first complex has a long PR interval and wide QRS (yellow highlight) and the second a miniscule P wave with a vertical line for the QRS (blue highlight).

Other bizarre confusing patterns can be seen.

When only the QRS/T waves are involved Wenckebach AV block can be mis-diagnosed (red highlight). The first complex has a P wave and a miniscule QRS, whereas the second last only a T wave which resembles a P wave.

The appearance of an extra QRS/T mimics an atrial ectopic (yellow highlight).

‍

Harry Mond

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