Thanks to one our great HCMC nurses, Ryan Burch. He figured this one out.
A dialysis patient presented with dyspnea. He was a bit fluid overloaded and not hyperkalemic.
This ECG was recorded:
My answer, as I looked with bleary eyes at my phone: "I have to say I've never seen this one before."
Later, I looked into the chart and found an ECG from a few days before:
Ryan Burch, RN, was the nurse caring for the patient, later sent me the same ECG, stating the following:
"This ECG had people stumped and concerned but I read an article in www.ecgmedicaltraining.com (see below) about an artifact a few weeks prior which I thought looked similar and the suggestion was that a lead had been placed over an artery. I switched lead placement and this ECG was recorded 5 minutes later:"
He found that the left arm electrode had been placed near the patient's left arm dialysis fistula, which was pulsating with a palpable thrill.
This resulted in the following:
Explanation
All leads are derived from 3 bipolar electrodes and one unipolar electrode.
Leads I, II, and III depend on bipolar leads voltage differences:
--Lead I uses the right and left arm
--Lead II uses the right arm and the leg
--Lead III uses the left arm and the leg.
--The Wilson (or Goldberger) Central Terminal is used to produce the augmented (a) leads:
aVR, aVL, aVF.
Arterial pulse tapping artifact
https://www.aclsmedicaltraining.com/blog/guide-to-understanding-ecg-artifact/
This online article references the article below by Emre Aslanger, a great guy who occasionally corresponds with me about ECGs.
Aslanger E, Yalin K. Electromechanical association: a subtle electrocardiogram artifact. Journal of Electrocardiology. 2012;45(1):15-17. doi:10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2010.12.162.
Incredibly, this case was just published in Circulation on January 22, 2018 (thanks to Brooks Walsh for finding this!)
Asymptomatic ST-Segment–Elevation ECG in Patient With Kidney Failure. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.117.032657. Circulation. Originally published January 22, 2018
Here is a case from Circulation year 2000 that was misdiagnosed as due to pancreatitis. But you can tell from the normal lead III that this was a right arm electrode problem:
http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/101/25/2989.full
A dialysis patient presented with dyspnea. He was a bit fluid overloaded and not hyperkalemic.
This ECG was recorded:
My answer, as I looked with bleary eyes at my phone: "I have to say I've never seen this one before."
Later, I looked into the chart and found an ECG from a few days before:
I texted back: "Those T-waves were gone 5 minutes later. Artifact!" |
Ryan Burch, RN, was the nurse caring for the patient, later sent me the same ECG, stating the following:
"This ECG had people stumped and concerned but I read an article in www.ecgmedicaltraining.com (see below) about an artifact a few weeks prior which I thought looked similar and the suggestion was that a lead had been placed over an artery. I switched lead placement and this ECG was recorded 5 minutes later:"
He found that the left arm electrode had been placed near the patient's left arm dialysis fistula, which was pulsating with a palpable thrill.
This resulted in the following:
Wandering Artifact only |
Explanation
All leads are derived from 3 bipolar electrodes and one unipolar electrode.
Leads I, II, and III depend on bipolar leads voltage differences:
--Lead I uses the right and left arm
--Lead II uses the right arm and the leg
--Lead III uses the left arm and the leg.
--The Wilson (or Goldberger) Central Terminal is used to produce the augmented (a) leads:
aVR, aVL, aVF.
Arterial pulse tapping artifact
https://www.aclsmedicaltraining.com/blog/guide-to-understanding-ecg-artifact/
This online article references the article below by Emre Aslanger, a great guy who occasionally corresponds with me about ECGs.
Aslanger E, Yalin K. Electromechanical association: a subtle electrocardiogram artifact. Journal of Electrocardiology. 2012;45(1):15-17. doi:10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2010.12.162.
Incredibly, this case was just published in Circulation on January 22, 2018 (thanks to Brooks Walsh for finding this!)
Asymptomatic ST-Segment–Elevation ECG in Patient With Kidney Failure. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.117.032657. Circulation. Originally published January 22, 2018
Here is a case from Circulation year 2000 that was misdiagnosed as due to pancreatitis. But you can tell from the normal lead III that this was a right arm electrode problem:
http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/101/25/2989.full
It is full text!!
Why is there also artifact in precordial leads?
Aslanger explains:
Aslanger explains:
“[O]ne may expect that the leads not connected to the electrode affected by the source of disturbance would be free of distortion; but this is not the case. When one of the limb electrodes is affected by a source of disturbance, it distorts not only the corresponding derivation but also [the others] which are all calculated by mathematical equations…”
“…precordial leads [are also affected] because the Wilson central terminal, which constitutes the negative pole of the unipolar leads, is produced by connecting 3 limb electrodes via a simple, resistive network to give an average potential across the body.”
This isn't the first time I have seen changes like this in a case report.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading (Tom's?) post on ACLSmedicaltraining.com a while back I realized that its very possible that arterial pulses could have been the true cause..
Here are two published cases with similar T waves :
http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/101/25/2989.full
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010865016300339
Changes due to pancreatitis? Or also these case studies show artifact?
Shalom
Thanks!!
DeleteI can't see the second one, but the first is definitely NOT due to pericarditis! It is artifact.
DeleteThis case is a perfect example of a phenomenon that when seen for the first time looks bizarre — but which AFTER one learns about the phenomenon, it becomes extremely EASY to recognize. I’ll add the following points: i) The artifact manifests a FIXED relationship to the QRS complex — therefore, it has to be related to the heart beat (or to arterial pulsations); ii) Although in opposite directions, the AMPLITUDE of the artifactual deflection in limb leads I and III is equal — but there is no artifact at all in lead II. By the formulas shown by Dr. Smith — this is what localizes the source of the artifact to the Left Arm (the one limb that is not involved in the derivation of lead II appearance; - iii) The amplitude of the artifact in the affected limb lead electrode ( = lead aVL) is approximately EQUAL to the amplitude of the artifact in leads I and III; - iv) The amplitude of the artifact in the other two augmented leads ( = leads aVR and aVF) is approximately HALF of the amplitude of the artifact in lead aVL (which is as expected by the formulas that Dr. Smith shows above, in which Left arm voltage is divided in half to derive net voltage in augmented leads aVR and aVF); - and finally v) The amplitude of the artifact in the 6 chest leads is approximately 1/3 of the amplitude of the artifact in aVL (which is also as expected, since potential in each of the 6 unipolar chest leads is derived by subtracting the potential of the “indifferent” connection [which is determined after dividing the sum of the limb lead potentials by 3]). So, with a little practice, you can immediately KNOW with 100% certainty that the bizarre deflections on a tracing like this one are ARTIFACT, and related to arterial pulsations — because nothing else shows fixed relation to the QRS in the mathematical relationships described in points ii, iii, iv and v above!
ReplyDeleteGreat comments!
DeleteThanks, Ken. And thanks for the reference to the formulas! You are credited now.
most extraordinary.
ReplyDeletethank you
And don’t forget this one: https://dx.doi.org/10.5603/KP.2018.0185 for complete collection of published cases.
ReplyDelete