Sunday, January 20, 2019

Pre-existing Left Bundle Branch Block and Atrial Fib: what is alarming on this routine pre-procedure ECG?

An elderly patient had a pre-procedure ECG (ECG-1).  She was asymptomatic.  The patient had known Left Bundle Branch Block (LBBB) and atrial fibrillation (see ECG-2 below), and was rate controlled on metoprolol. 

ECG-1
What is the problem?


ECG-2 (previous for comparison):




















There are enormous U-waves, best seen in V1-V3, but also in V4 and V5.  This was seen by the overreading cardiologist.  The cardiologist called the The K was checked and it was 1.9 mEq/L.

The patient was sent to the ED for hypokalemia.

While being assessed and having potassium orally and IV, her heart rate dropped to 30 beats per minute (2 second pauses).  She was dizzy whenever not supine (symptomatic).

This 12-lead ECG (ECG-3) captures her at a heart rate in the 40s, but the monitor at times had a much slower rate.

ECG-3:
Still in atrial fibrilation with a slow ventricular response and LBBB, and with large U-waves.  This implies the AV node is not working well.


What do you want to do?

















This is what we did:

We gave atropine and the heart rate responded perfectly, with rate rising to 70-80.

After replenishment of KCl, orally and IV, the heart rate stabilized and the etiologies of the hypokalemia were also corrected.

The patient was discharged the next day.

Severe hypokalemia causes life threatening dysrhythmias.  At exactly what level one is at risk of such dysrhythmia is uncertain, but certainly any K below 2.0 is life threatening.  Probably under 2.5 is life threatening.  I believe that any hypokalemia that results in ECG abnormalities such as large U-waves, long QT, or ST-T abnormalities is potentially life threatening.


There are few reports of AV block due to hypokalemia, but it has been described.  It is also rare to see U-waves in the setting of LBBB.


Two case reports of hypokalemia associated with AV block

Hypokalemia Associated With Infra-His Mobitz Type Second Degree A-V Block

Atrioventricular conduction disturbances with hypokalemia in renal tubular acidosis



See this post for an in-depth discussion of several cases of severe hypokalemia and what to do about it:

STEMI with Life-Threatening Hypokalemia and Incessant Torsades de Pointes




1 comment:

  1. During IV K replacement the K concentration in the relatively small extracellular compartment may rise rapidly, or even become abnormally high, transiently, until equilibration. I wonder if that's what happened here. The persistence of large U waves on the bradycardic tracing suggests that it was still low, of course, unless there is some time lag. Maybe it's just the rate of rise. Another explanation might be that the hypokalemia increased the rate of fibrillatory impulses bombarding the AVN from above, thereby causing more concealed conduction and increased refractoriness in the AV junction.

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