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ECG
Level 3
Tutorial: Chamber Sizes
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Tutorial: Chamber Sizes
Learn to assess atrial enlargement and ventricular hypertrophy on ECG.
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Tutorial: Chamber Sizes
Left Atrial Enlargement
Lessons
42
Times Practiced
1284
Cases Completed
1h 24m
Total Time spent
1m 24s
Average Time
Progress
Accuracy
Efficiency
Accuracy
Efficiency
1
Left Atrial Enlargement
Left Atrial Enlargement
2
Right atrial enlargement
Right atrial enlargement
3
Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
Left Ventricular Hypertrophy
4
Right Ventricular Hypertrophy
Right Ventricular Hypertrophy
Next
Next Lesson
Left Atrial Enlargement
Left atrial enlargement is abbreviated LAE. Leads II and V
1
show the P waves the best. Therefore, we will focus on those 2 leads.
The SA node is located in the right atrium (RA). Therefore, atrial depolarization starts in the RA and terminates in the left atrium (LA). Normally, the RA and LA depolarize virtually at the same time due to fast conduction through the atrial conducting fibers called Bachmann's bundle. However, in diseased states of the left atrium, conduction becomes abnormal and depolarization through the LA is delayed and/or prolonged.
Therefore, in LA disease, the first "half" of the P wave mostly represents the RA and the second "half" represents the LA. The second half of the P wave is called the
terminal portion
of the P wave. Although this is not entirely true, it is helpful to think of the P wave this way.
When the left atrium enlarges, it enlarges posteriorly and downward. The image below shows yellow lines that roughly indicate the posterior enlargement of the LA:
The RA deporalizes first with electrical activity moving
toward
V
1
seen below by the blue arrows:
Next, the LA depolarizes
away
from V
1
:
Therefore, with LAE, the P wave in V
1
will be
initially upgoing
for the first portion (red arrow below) and then
downgoing in the terminal portion
(blue arrow). This is called
biphasic
. The green arrow points to the QRS. The T wave is not seen in this image.
LAE produces a biphasic P wave in V
1
.
Here are two more examples of biphasic P waves in
V
1
:
One final detail: the width of the inverted (second) part of the P wave should be at least 40 ms (1 little square) wide. In other words, a very small downward deflection is not significant. Can you see in the above examples that the width of the downgoing part is easily > 1 little square?
In
lead II
, the findings are different. Remember that lead II measures electrical activity in the coronal plane (first image). The direction of travel of atrial depolarization is virtually parallel to the lead II (last 2 images). Therefore, P waves show up very well in lead II, but since we are measuring in a different "plane" compared to lead V
1
, the P wave changes with LAE are different.
When the LA enlarges, wave of depolarization measured in lead II behaves like 2 separate waves. The first one is the right atrium and the second one is the left atrium. The 2 waves partly overlap each other, so it creates an
M shaped P wave in lead II
. This is also called a
notched P wave
. In the diagram below, there is an extra blue and red fuzzy line to show the 2 different atrial waves:
Here are 2 examples of M shaped P waves in lead II:
One more thing: when one atrium is enlarged, it will take more time for the wave of depolarization to travel across both atria. Therefore, another diagnostic feature of LAE is a "wide" P wave, defined as > 120 ms (3 little squares). This is easy to remember because it is the same criteria for a wide QRS.
Summary of Diagnostic Criteria for LAE:
wide P wave > 120 ms
M shaped P wave in lead II
biphasic P wave in lead V
1
(initally upward, terminal portion downward)
terminal portion of V
1
is at least 1 little square wide
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