Answer DV Case 4

Revision as of 21:50, 10 November 2008 by Drj (talk | contribs) (New page: # The rhythm shows inverted P-waves in the inferior leads indicative of atrial rhythm. # The answer on this question is difficult. An atrial rhythm can be the result of SA block. This ECG ...)
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  1. The rhythm shows inverted P-waves in the inferior leads indicative of atrial rhythm.
  2. The answer on this question is difficult. An atrial rhythm can be the result of SA block. This ECG however cannot produce the proper answer. The use of beta-blockers for instance, could cause a marked lowering of the sinus rhythm, allowing for an atrial escape rhythm, which is slow as well.
  3. The cause of the pauses in the atrial rhythm are atrial premature beats, blocking the exit of the atrial prevailing atrial rhythms. These atrial premature beats can be appreciated when looking at the T-waves of the conducted beats preceding the pause.
  4. This question cannot be answered on this ECG. Pacing could be indicated as the patient has dizzy spells. However, blocked atrial beats per se are no pacemaker indication.
  5. The proper workup could be: Stopping medication that lowers the sinus node frequency (B-blockers, funny current blockers, calcium channel blockers).

And in any case a long term ECG recording. Measuring the sinus node recovery time is questionable.