Case 1. Temperature 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees F) due to environmental hypothermia.
click on ECGs for better resolution
Case 2. A young paraplegic presented confused. Among the early tests performed was this ECG which was showed to me:
I asked about the temperature.
Here is the patient's previous ECG:
No ST elevation, and much smaller J-wave notching, seen best in V4. |
A rectal temperature was 30.8 degrees Celsius.
Here is the ECG after rewarming:
J-wave notching persists but is much smaller. |
Here they are side by side to better see the difference:
The J-waves are subtly larger in the hypothermic condition |
The ECG in hypothermia
Rhythm: The most common rhythms in hypothermia are sinus bradycardia, junctional bradycardia, and atrial fibrillation. Shivering artifact is common. Atrial flutter is seen in case 1. At temperatures below 30 C, the patient is at risk for ventricular fibrillation. In this study of 29 humans cooled to 28-30 C for cardiac surgery, 19 developed atrial fibrillation and 2 ventricular fibrillation.
QRS: Osborn waves are thought to be pathognomonic of hypothermia, but can also be seen in normothermic patients. "J-waves" or "J-point notching" is very common in early repolarization. Very narrow Osborn waves were reported in severe hypercalcemia (level 16.3). Sometimes a short ST segment of hyperCa can be misinterpreted as an Osborn wave (see image below); that is not the case in the aforementioned case report. J-wave syndromes are proposed to give a unifying pathophysiology to Osborn waves of hypothermia and early repolarization, as well as Brugada syndrome.
Very large and wide J-waves, as in case 1, are almost exclusively due to hypothermia. The etiology is beyond the scope of this blog, but may be read here.
Hypothermia and pseudoinfarction patterns: MI or ischemia (either ST elevation or depression) may be mimicked either by 1) repolarization abnormalities (As in Case 2, with ST elevation) or by 2) confusing the J-wave with the ST segment, as in this case in JACC (full text) and this case in Archives of Internal Medicine (no full text). This latter case also has ST segment depression as a repolarization abnormality.
Short ST segment (with resulting short QT interval) of hypercalcemia mimicking Osborn waves
Thanks for another interesting case Dr. Smith. 2 questions a bit off the topic though, I noticed the computerised QTc was way off in case 2. Do you put as much faith in the computerised QTc as you do with the computerised interpretation of the ECG? And how did the inaccuracies of computerised QTc measurement affect your equation for the LAD occlusion vs early repolarisation?
ReplyDeleteIn my experience and in the literature, QTc is done well by the computer when it is not long, but whenever it is not long, I do not trust it and do it myself. In my study, all QTC's were in the normal range
ReplyDeleteI should have written, "whenever it IS long..."
DeleteHow to differentiate j wave and left bbb ?
ReplyDeleteJ-wave is a second wave. Very different.
DeleteSteve Smith
thanks steve
ReplyDeletebut wat about osborn waves in head injury
how to differentiate it from brain injury
ReplyDeleteSend me an image of Osborn waves in head injury. I'm skeptical that they are really the same.
DeleteHi Dr Smith, would like to ask how to differentiate epsilon wave in ARVD and osborn wave if merely based on ECG?
ReplyDeleteThe Osborn wave is a single, larger, upright deflection at the end of the QRS. The epsilon wave is multiple small wavelets: https://hqmeded-ecg.blogspot.com/search/label/Arrhythmogenic%20Right%20ventricular%20dysplasia
DeleteGreat post. Thanks doc..
ReplyDeletehow do we differentiate it with the J wave seen in BER?
ReplyDeleteThe best way is by taking the temperature!
Delete