Friday, October 21, 2016

Atrial Flutter. What else??

A 50-something presented with bradycardia.  No other history is available.  Here is the EKG:
There is obvious atrial flutter.  The ventricular rate is 29.
The QRS has the morphology of Right Bundle Branch Block (RBBB) and Left Anterior Fascicular Block (LAFB)

There is also a very long QT, primarily due to a long ST segment
What is really going on?
















This is NOT really RBBB and LAFB.  The flutter waves are not conducting through the AV node.   This is not Flutter with 7 or 8 to 1 conduction. Instead, there is third degree (complete) AV block.

How do I know?  When atrial flutter conducts, the QRS should occur at the same part of the flutter wave for every QRS.  Every time the flutter circuit goes around the atrium it arrives at the AV node at the same part of the wave and, if the AV node is ready to conduct, that is when it conducts.

If you look closely, this does not happen:
On beat 1, the QRS starts at the peak.
On beat 2, it starts earlier
On beat 3, it starts earlier still
On beat 4, it starts just after the peak
Beat 5 looks like beat 2.
Instead, there is a very regular escape rhythm


Thus, there is complete AV dissociation.

[There are times when there is atrial flutter and Wenckebach, and the lengthening PR interval changes this otherwise fixed relationship between flutter waves and QRS, but it is far more rare than complete block AND it does not occur with 6:1 block.]

So this is atrial flutter with complete AV block and a regular escape rhythm.

Is it a junctional escape?  A junctional escape should be around a rate of 40, and it should be narrow, unless there is a junctional escape + RBBB + LAFB.  This is possible.

Much more likely is that this is a ventricular escape.  Then why the RBBB and LAFB morphology? Because the escape is originating in the posterior fascicle.  When there is a supraventricular rhythm with RBBB and LAFB, the impulse gets to the posterior fascicle only, then spreads to the ventricle from the posterior fascicle.  Thus, RBBB + LAFB also, in a sense, originates from the posterior fascicle.  In this case, there is no supraventricular stimulus.  There is only the automatic escape, and it originates from the posterior fascicle.

Diagnosis: Atrial Flutter with complete, third degree, AV block.  The long ST segment is probably due to hypocalcemia.  Consider hyperkalemia.

Consider reversible causes (especially hyperkalemia or drug effect from beta blockers or calcium channel blockers before pacing).

13 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Very long. Looks like a long ST segment. This would typically be due to hypocalcemia.

      Delete
  2. hello sir,
    thank you for this amazing ecg.
    what about this extremely long qt-interval. is that normal for ventricular escape rhythm or is it long-qt-syndrome as well? what are your thoughts about that?
    thx in advance.
    best regards, flummy

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Probably due to hypocalcemia, as there is a long ST segment

      Delete
  3. Dr. Smith, the T axis seems to me right-superior, is it an expected finding in LPF escape?

    ReplyDelete
  4. never mind, just read your comment on the long qt -->hypocalemia, thx flummy

    ReplyDelete
  5. Can digoxin toxicity cause it as well?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It can cause just about anything, but typically it would lead to AV block with an accelerated junctional rhythm, not to junctional arrest with ventricular escape

      Delete
  6. It is always very difficult to measure the QT interval, not to mention the Qtc, in case of atrial arrhythmyas whose activity interfer with the interpretation of the QT interval. Anyway the present patient do need monitoring.
    Thank you for another lesson!
    Mario

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hypothermia may be a cause of bradycardia with long QT (due to a long ST segment)

    ReplyDelete

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