BASICS OF ECG
Chapter Objectives
• To recognize the normal rhythm of the heart -
“Normal Sinus Rhythm.”
• To recognize the 13 most common rhythm
disturbances.
• To recognize an acute myocardial infarction on a
12-lead ECG.
Normal Impulse Conduction
Sinoatrial node
AV node
Bundle of His
Bundle Branches
Purkinje fibers
Impulse Conduction & the ECG
Sinoatrial node
AV node
Bundle of His
Bundle Branches
Purkinje fibers
Cardiac Action Potential
Smooth Muscle Contraction
The “PQRST”
• P wave - Atrial
depolarization
• QRS - Ventricular
depolarization
• T wave - Ventricular
repolarization
The PR Interval
Atrial depolarization
+
delay in AV junction
(AV node/Bundle of His)
(delay allows time for the
atria to contract before
the ventricles contract)
Pacemakers of the Heart
• SA Node - Dominant pacemaker with an intrinsic
rate of 60 - 100 beats/minute.
• AV Node - Back-up pacemaker with an intrinsic
rate of 40 - 60 beats/minute.
• Ventricular cells - Back-up pacemaker with an
intrinsic rate of 20 - 45 bpm.
Brief Cardiac Anatomy
Inferior Surface of the Heart
Limb Leads of ECG
The ECG Paper
• Horizontally
– One small box - 0.04 s
– One large box - 0.20 s
• Vertically
– One large box – 1 mm
The ECG Paper (cont)
3 3
sec sec
• Every 3 seconds (15 large boxes) is marked by a
vertical line.
• This helps when calculating the heart rate.
NOTE: the strips used for this slide and the following
slides are not marked but all are 6 seconds long.
ECG Rhythm Interpretation
How to Analyze a Rhythm
Chapter Objective
• To recognize the normal rhythm of the heart -
“Normal Sinus Rhythm.”
Rhythm Analysis
• Step 1: Calculate rate.
• Step 2: Determine regularity.
• Step 3: Assess the P waves.
• Step 4: Determine PR interval.
• Step 5: Determine QRS duration.
Step 1: Calculate Rate
3 3
• Option 1 sec sec
– Count the # of R waves in a 6 second rhythm strip,
then multiply by 10.
– Reminder: all rhythm strips in the Modules are 6
seconds in length.
Interpretation?
9 x 10 = 90 bpm
Step 1: Calculate Rate
R
wave
• Option 2
– Find a R wave that lands on a bold line.
– Count the # of large boxes to the next R wave. If the
second R wave is 1 large box away the rate is 300, 2
boxes - 150, 3 boxes - 100, 4 boxes - 75, etc. (cont)
Step 1: Calculate Rate
3 1 1
0 5 0 7 6 5
0 0 0 5 0 0
• Option 2 (cont)
– Memorize the sequence:
300 - 150 - 100 - 75 - 60 - 50
Interpretation? Approx. 1 box less than
100 = 95 bpm
Step 2: Determine regularity
R R
• Look at the R-R distances (using a caliper or
markings on a pen or paper).
• Regular (are they equidistant apart)? Occasionally
irregular? Regularly irregular? Irregularly
irregular?
Interpretation? Regular
Step 3: Assess the P waves
• Are there P waves?
• Do the P waves all look alike?
• Do the P waves occur at a regular rate?
• Is there one P wave before each QRS?
Interpretation? Normal P waves with 1 P
wave for every QRS
Step 4: Determine PR interval
• Normal: 0.12 - 0.20 seconds.
(3 - 5 boxes)
Interpretation? 0.12 seconds
Step 5: QRS duration
• Normal: 0.04 - 0.12 seconds.
(1 - 3 boxes)
Interpretation? 0.08 seconds
Rhythm Summary
• Rate 90-95 bpm
• Regularity regular
• P waves normal
• PR interval 0.12 s
• QRS duration 0.08 s
Interpretation? Normal Sinus Rhythm
Normal Sinus Rhythm (NSR)
• Etiology: the electrical impulse is formed in the
SA node and conducted normally.
• This is the normal rhythm of the heart; other
rhythms that do not conduct via the typical
pathway are called arrhythmias.
NSR Parameters