Case 1.
An elderly patient presented with a massive hemiplegic ischemic stroke of 24 hours duration. CT stroke series showed a middle cerebral artery thrombus.
He had an ECG recorded:
Case 1, ECG 1:
Answer: There is no atrial pacing spike. This is atrial fibrillation (not diagnosed by the computer) but with a regular ventricular rhythm because the ventricle is regularly paced by an artificial pacemaker (ventricular paced rhythm, VPR). This may easily deceive both the computer and the overreading physician because one of the primary means of identifying atrial fibrillation is by an irregularly irregular heart rate.
Case 2
This patient presented on the same day: She had a history of atrial fibrillation, CHF, COPD, HTN, CVA anticoagulated on Coumadin who presents for evaluation of shortness of breath.
Case 2 ECG (ECG 2):
Case 1, later in the day (ECG 3):
There were previous ECGs available for case 1 (the stroke patient):
Case 1, first previous ECG (ECG 4)
Again, there are no atrial pacer spikes. There is probably underlying atrial fibrillation but neither the computer nor the physician diagnosed it. The physician seemed to believe that if the computer detected it, it must be there. But this may not be an accurate assumption.
Another second previous ECG (ECG 5):
There are many little spikes. These are artifact, and have nothing to do with a cardiac pacemaker. Sometimes you can see similar artifact from central nervous system devices. Thus, ECG 5 also has atrial fibrillation that went undiagnosed.
Thus there are many failures of atrial rhythm diagnosis here, by both the computer and the overreading physician, because of the presence of VPR:
ECG 1 has atrial fibrillation (undiagnosed), not atrial pacing
ECG 2 has sinus rhythm, which is not mentioned.
Only ECG 3 has atrial fibrillation correctly diagnosed because there are no ventricular pacing spikes and the rhythm is irregular.
ECG 4 has atrial fibrillation misdiagnosed as an atrial pacer
ECG 5 has undiagnosed atrial fibrillation
Thus, for Case 1, 2 previous ECGs had failed to diagnose atrial fibrillation. In one, the diagnosis was incorrect: "Electronic Atrial Pacemaker" diagnosed by both computer and overreading physician. In the other case, no atrial diagnosis was given by either computer or physician.
Thus, the case 1 patient was never diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, even though it was present, and the atrial fibrillation ultimately resulted in catastrophic stroke.
This failure to diagnose atrial fib by the automated algorithm is very common. In the setting of VPR, many conventional algorithms do not even attempt an atrial rhythm diagnosis. And this leads physicians astray. Below are a couple important articles on the topic. There is a large literature on misdiagnosis of atrial fib by conventional computer algorithms.
Moreover, when a conventional algorithm does diagnose atrial fibrillation, it is an overdiagnosis in up to 20% of cases. It is very common for these computer errors to go uncorrected by the overreading physician.
Learning Points:
1. All atrial rhythm diagnoses by the computer algorithm must be scrutinized.
2. The computer algorithm may not even attempt an atrial rhythm diagnosis in the presence of VPR.
3. Atrial fibrillation in the presence of VPR will usually have a regular rhythm, and thus be difficult to discern.
4. Even a computer diagnosis of "atrial paced rhythm" may be a false positive.
K. Wang comment:
Of the 4297 consecutive ECGs forming the basis of this report, 13.1% (565/4297) required revision of the computer-based rhythm interpretation. The most common errors were related to interpretive statements involving patients with pacemakers: of 343 ECGs with pacemaker activity comprising 8.0% of the study ECGs, 75.2% (258/343) required revision, so that 45.7% of all inaccurate rhythm statements in this population occurred in patients with pacemakers. The most common error in this subgroup was failure of the algorithm to detect evident underlying rhythms, such as sinus rhythm with dual chamber pacing or underlying atrial fibrillation, in 40.2% (138/343). Dual chamber pacing was an evident problem, with a specificity of 100% but a sensitivity of only 28.1% (73/260), most often caused by relatively minor mis-identification of these patients as simply ventricular paced. More important was complete failure to identify pacemaker activity in 10.2% of the paced patients (35/343). Because special diagnostic problems and special engineering solutions apply to pacemaker detection algorithms, these patients were eliminated from further data analysis, which focuses on the remaining 3954 consecutive unpaced ECGs in the group. Predominant physician-confirmed primary rhythms in this unpaced patient population include sinus rhythm (90.5%), atrial fibrillation (6.3%), atrial flutter (1.0%), and atrial tachycardia (0.9%).
An elderly patient presented with a massive hemiplegic ischemic stroke of 24 hours duration. CT stroke series showed a middle cerebral artery thrombus.
He had an ECG recorded:
Case 1, ECG 1:
Computer: "Electronic Atrial Pacemaker. Electronic Ventricular Pacemaker" No other interpretation. What do you think? |
Answer: There is no atrial pacing spike. This is atrial fibrillation (not diagnosed by the computer) but with a regular ventricular rhythm because the ventricle is regularly paced by an artificial pacemaker (ventricular paced rhythm, VPR). This may easily deceive both the computer and the overreading physician because one of the primary means of identifying atrial fibrillation is by an irregularly irregular heart rate.
Case 2
This patient presented on the same day: She had a history of atrial fibrillation, CHF, COPD, HTN, CVA anticoagulated on Coumadin who presents for evaluation of shortness of breath.
Case 2 ECG (ECG 2):
Computer: "electronic ventricular pacemaker" What do you think? |
There is no mention of sinus rhythm, or any atrial rhythm diagnosis, even though sinus rhythm is obvious. There is also, of course, VPR and PVCs.
Case 1, later in the day (ECG 3):
There were previous ECGs available for case 1 (the stroke patient):
Case 1, first previous ECG (ECG 4)
Computer and physician overread are: "Electronic Atrial Pacer" "Electronic Ventricular Pacer" What do you think? |
Again, there are no atrial pacer spikes. There is probably underlying atrial fibrillation but neither the computer nor the physician diagnosed it. The physician seemed to believe that if the computer detected it, it must be there. But this may not be an accurate assumption.
Another second previous ECG (ECG 5):
Computer and Physician overread: "Ventricular Paced Rhythm. Artifact makes interpretation difficult." |
There are many little spikes. These are artifact, and have nothing to do with a cardiac pacemaker. Sometimes you can see similar artifact from central nervous system devices. Thus, ECG 5 also has atrial fibrillation that went undiagnosed.
Thus there are many failures of atrial rhythm diagnosis here, by both the computer and the overreading physician, because of the presence of VPR:
ECG 1 has atrial fibrillation (undiagnosed), not atrial pacing
ECG 2 has sinus rhythm, which is not mentioned.
Only ECG 3 has atrial fibrillation correctly diagnosed because there are no ventricular pacing spikes and the rhythm is irregular.
ECG 4 has atrial fibrillation misdiagnosed as an atrial pacer
ECG 5 has undiagnosed atrial fibrillation
Thus, for Case 1, 2 previous ECGs had failed to diagnose atrial fibrillation. In one, the diagnosis was incorrect: "Electronic Atrial Pacemaker" diagnosed by both computer and overreading physician. In the other case, no atrial diagnosis was given by either computer or physician.
Thus, the case 1 patient was never diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, even though it was present, and the atrial fibrillation ultimately resulted in catastrophic stroke.
This failure to diagnose atrial fib by the automated algorithm is very common. In the setting of VPR, many conventional algorithms do not even attempt an atrial rhythm diagnosis. And this leads physicians astray. Below are a couple important articles on the topic. There is a large literature on misdiagnosis of atrial fib by conventional computer algorithms.
Moreover, when a conventional algorithm does diagnose atrial fibrillation, it is an overdiagnosis in up to 20% of cases. It is very common for these computer errors to go uncorrected by the overreading physician.
Learning Points:
1. All atrial rhythm diagnoses by the computer algorithm must be scrutinized.
2. The computer algorithm may not even attempt an atrial rhythm diagnosis in the presence of VPR.
3. Atrial fibrillation in the presence of VPR will usually have a regular rhythm, and thus be difficult to discern.
4. Even a computer diagnosis of "atrial paced rhythm" may be a false positive.
K. Wang comment:
When we read a
ventricularly paced ECG and see regularly occurring QRSs after each
pacer spike, we are satisfied saying that the pacemaker is functioning
normally and the ECG reading ends there. However, it is very important
to see what the atria are doing; are they in sinus rhythm (with or
without association with the QRS)?, retrogradely conducting?,
fibrillating?, fluttering? If fibrillating, the patient has the same
risk of systemic embolization as in non-paced (ordinary) atrial
fibrillation. V1 lead is the best lead to see what the atria are doing
(see case 2 ECG 2 above). By the way, it looks like we are also dealing
with hyperkalemia in case 2.
K. Wang.
Diagnostic performance of a computer-based ECG rhythm algorithm
https://www-sciencedirect-com.ezp2.lib.umn.edu/science/article/pii/S0022073605000488Of the 4297 consecutive ECGs forming the basis of this report, 13.1% (565/4297) required revision of the computer-based rhythm interpretation. The most common errors were related to interpretive statements involving patients with pacemakers: of 343 ECGs with pacemaker activity comprising 8.0% of the study ECGs, 75.2% (258/343) required revision, so that 45.7% of all inaccurate rhythm statements in this population occurred in patients with pacemakers. The most common error in this subgroup was failure of the algorithm to detect evident underlying rhythms, such as sinus rhythm with dual chamber pacing or underlying atrial fibrillation, in 40.2% (138/343). Dual chamber pacing was an evident problem, with a specificity of 100% but a sensitivity of only 28.1% (73/260), most often caused by relatively minor mis-identification of these patients as simply ventricular paced. More important was complete failure to identify pacemaker activity in 10.2% of the paced patients (35/343). Because special diagnostic problems and special engineering solutions apply to pacemaker detection algorithms, these patients were eliminated from further data analysis, which focuses on the remaining 3954 consecutive unpaced ECGs in the group. Predominant physician-confirmed primary rhythms in this unpaced patient population include sinus rhythm (90.5%), atrial fibrillation (6.3%), atrial flutter (1.0%), and atrial tachycardia (0.9%).
This case makes clinically very important point. Usually, when one encounters a ventricularly paced rhythm, as long as the QRSs are occurring regularly after each ventricular pacemaker spike, we are satisfied by saying that the PACEMAKER IS FUNCTIONING NORMALLY, and the ECG reading ends there, not paying attention to what the atria are doing. It is very important to ask "are they in sinus rhythm?, P-sensed-V-paced? sinus P with complete AV block?,fibrillating?, fluttering? retrogradely conducting?, because if they are fibrillating, the patient has the same risk of embolization as in non-paced atrial fib. Lead V1 is often the very good lead to see what the atria are doing as the last tracing above demonstrated, fibrillating !!
ReplyDeleteK. Wang.
Very good article. I was search about this. I got it what i needed.
ReplyDeleteThanks
Interesting article, it turns out there are many cases of computer often fails to diagnose atrial fibrillation in ventricular experienced by some practitioners. Maybe in the future should be more careful again and do not immediately trust the computer ...
ReplyDelete@ Dagang Valas — In my experience — there are aspects of the computerized interpretation that CAN be helpful — and other aspects in which you should know BEFOREHAND that you will NOT be able to trust what the computer says. IF the rhythm is ANYTHING OTHER than normal sinus mechansim — my advice is DO NOT TRUST the Computerized Interpretation for the cardiac rhythm! My views on how best to use Computerized ECG interpretations can be found here — http://ecg-interpretation.blogspot.com/2013/09/ecg-interpretation-review-74.html — :) P.S. I’ll add that the cases of paced rhythms with underlying AFib in this post are made VERY difficult to assess by the presence of marked baseline ARTIFACT.
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