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- Sinus tachycardia • LITFL • ECG Library Diagnosis
Sinus tachycardia is usually a secondary condition Inappropriate sinus tachycardia is a primary condition diagnosed in patients with symptomatic persisting sinus tachycardia in which the below causes have been excluded
- RBBB and Left Posterior Fascicular Block (LPFB)
The right axis deviation suggests Left Posterior Fascicular Block (LPFB), and, combined with RBBB, this suggests bifascicular block The patient is therefore at risk of complete (third degree) block, which could cause a Stokes–Adams attack
- [Cardio-FR] Sinus tachycardia with RBBB alternating with pre-excitation
This tracing shows sinus tachycardia with a RBBB morphology for every second complex (QRS 2,4,6) with an rSR’ in V1 The other QRS complexes are broad and exhibit pre-excitation with a short PR and a ∂-wave
- Sinus tachycardia Inappropriate sinus tachycardia - ECG ECHO
Learn about sinus tachycardia and inappropriate sinus tachycardia, with emphasis on definitions, criteria, ECG diagnosis, clinical features and management
- Narrowed Right Bundle Branch Block Pattern in Tachycardia
During palpitation, ECG displayed regular tachycardia with RBBB pattern and no discernible P waves The fixed RBBB in sinus rhythm supported the diagnosis of supraventricular tachycardia with RBBB
- Sinus Tachycardia - ECG
Discover sinus tachycardia, its frequency in sinus rhythm, and common causes Learn how ECGs identify sinus tachycardia for accurate diagnosis
- What is the interpretation and management of an EKG showing sinus . . .
This EKG finding typically represents a benign rhythm that requires observation only in asymptomatic patients with structurally normal hearts, though careful
- ECG Interpretation: ECG Blog #473 — Sinus Tach What Kind of BBB?
Thus, one might easily be fooled from Figure-1 — into thinking that today’s rhythm is sinus tachycardia Instead, the vertical RED line that I have added in Figure-2 shows that what "looks like" a P wave — is actually the initial part of the QRS complex!
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