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[[File:EKG limb leads.png|600px|thumbnail|right|The limb leads and augmented limb leads]]
[[File:EKG limb leads.png|600px|thumbnail|right|The limb leads and augmented limb leads]]
[[File:Directions of EKG leads.png|300px|thumb]]
[[File:Directions of EKG leads.png|300px|thumb]]
Leads I, II and III are called the ''limb leads''. The electrodes that form these signals are located on the limbs—one on each arm and one on the left leg.<ref name="umaryland1">{{cite web|url=http://davidge2.umaryland.edu/~emig/ekgtu03.html|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20110720090219/http://davidge2.umaryland.edu/~emig/ekgtu03.html|archivedate=20 July 2011|title=Lead Placement|work=Univ. of Maryland School of Medicine Emergency Medicine Interest Group |accessdate=15 August 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/nursing/practice/resources/cardiology/function/limb_leads.php |title=Limb Leads – ECG Lead Placement – Normal Function of the Heart – Cardiology Teaching Package – Practice Learning – Division of Nursing – The University of Nottingham |publisher=Nottingham.ac.uk |accessdate=15 August 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://library.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/ecg_outline/Lesson1/index.html#orientation |title=Lesson 1: The Standard 12 Lead ECG |publisher=Library.med.utah.edu |accessdate=15 August 2009}}{{dead link|date=February 2014}}</ref> The limb leads form the points of what is known as [[Einthoven's triangle]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nobelprize.org/medicine/educational/ecg/images/triangle.gif |title=Electrocardiogram explanation image |accessdate=28 February 2014}}</ref>
Leads I, II and III are called the ''limb leads''. The electrodes that form these signals are located on the limbs—one on each arm and one on the left leg.<ref name="umaryland1">{{cite web|url=http://davidge2.umaryland.edu/~emig/ekgtu03.html|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20110720090219/http://davidge2.umaryland.edu/~emig/ekgtu03.html|archivedate=20 July 2011|title=Lead Placement|work=Univ. of Maryland School of Medicine Emergency Medicine Interest Group |accessdate=15 August 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/nursing/practice/resources/cardiology/function/limb_leads.php |title=Limb Leads – ECG Lead Placement – Normal Function of the Heart – Cardiology Teaching Package – Practice Learning – Division of Nursing – The University of Nottingham |publisher=Nottingham.ac.uk |accessdate=15 August 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://library.med.utah.edu/kw/ecg/ecg_outline/Lesson1/index.html#orientation |title=Lesson 1: The Standard 12 Lead ECG |publisher=Library.med.utah.edu |accessdate=15 August 2009 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/20090322042804/http://library.med.utah.edu:80/kw/ecg/ecg_outline/Lesson1/index.html |archivedate=22 March 2009 }}</ref> The limb leads form the points of what is known as [[Einthoven's triangle]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nobelprize.org/medicine/educational/ecg/images/triangle.gif |title=Electrocardiogram explanation image |accessdate=28 February 2014}}</ref>
*Lead I is the voltage between the (positive) left arm (LA) electrode and right arm (RA) electrode:
*Lead I is the voltage between the (positive) left arm (LA) electrode and right arm (RA) electrode:
:<math>
:<math>

Revision as of 01:19, 29 August 2015

Template:Distinguish2

Electrocardiography
ECG of a heart in normal sinus rhythm.
ICD-9-CM89.52
MeSHD004562
MedlinePlus003868

Electrocardiography (ECG or EKG*) is the process of recording the electrical activity of the heart over a period of time using electrodes placed on a patient's body. These electrodes detect the tiny electrical changes on the skin that arise from the heart muscle depolarizing during each heartbeat.

In a conventional 12 lead ECG, ten electrodes are placed on the patient's limbs and on the surface of the chest. The overall magnitude of the heart's electrical potential is then measured from twelve different angles ("leads") and is recorded over a period of time (usually 10 seconds). In this way, the overall magnitude and direction of the heart's electrical depolarization is captured at each moment throughout the cardiac cycle.[1] The graph of voltage versus time produced by this noninvasive medical procedure is referred to as an electrocardiogram (abbreviated ECG or EKG).

During each heartbeat, a healthy heart will have an orderly progression of depolarization that starts with pacemaker cells in the sinoatrial node, spreads out through the atrium, passes through the atrioventricular node down into the bundle of His and into the Purkinje fibers spreading down and to the left throughout the ventricles.[2] This orderly pattern of depolarization gives rise to the characteristic ECG tracing. To the trained clinician, an ECG conveys a large amount of information about the structure of the heart and the function of its electrical conduction system.[3] Among other things, an ECG can be used to measure the rate and rhythm of heartbeats, the size and position of the heart chambers, the presence of any damage to the heart's muscle cells or conduction system, the effects of cardiac drugs, and the function of implanted pacemakers.[4]

Medical uses

Twelve-lead ECG of a 26-year-old male with an incomplete RBBB

Reasons for performing electrocardiography include:

The United States Preventive Services Task Force does not recommend electrocardiography for routine screening procedure in patients without symptoms and those at low risk for coronary heart disease.[6][7] This is because an ECG may falsely indicate the existence of a problem, leading to misdiagnosis, the recommendation of invasive procedures, or overtreatment. However, persons employed in certain critical occupations, such as aircraft pilots,[8] may be required to have an ECG as part of their routine health evaluations.

Continuous ECG monitoring is used to monitor critically ill patients, patients undergoing general anesthesia,[5] and patients who have an infrequently occurring cardiac dysrhythmia that would be unlikely be seen on a conventional ten second ECG.

Interpretation

Schematic representation of normal ECG

A typical ECG tracing is a repeating cycle of three electrical entities: a P wave (atrial depolarization), a QRS complex (ventricular depolarization) and a T wave (ventricular repolarization). The EKG is traditionally interpreted methodically in order to not miss any important findings.

Rate and rhythm

A heart rate between 60 and 100 beats per minute is considered normal. A heart rate slower than 60 beats per minute is said to be bradycardic and a rate faster than 100 beats per minute is said to be tachycardic. The physiologic rhythm of the heart is normal sinus rhythm, wherein the sinoatrial node initiates the cardiac cycle. In normal sinus rhythm a p-wave precedes every QRS complex and the rhythm is generally regular. If this is not the case, the patient may have a cardiac arrhythmia.

There are different types of rhythms that can cause the heart rate to be too fast or too slow. Many athletes can have a normal resting heart rate of less than 60 beats a minute. The key indicator of whether a slow heart rate is a problem is whether the person is having any kind of symptoms. One of the primary rhythms that can cause the heart rate to be slow and symptomatic is known as a heart block. There are many types of heart block, but the most common is an AV block.

There are also many rhythms that can cause the heart rate to be fast, the most common of which is sinus tachycardia. In sinus tachycardia, the depolarization is still starting in the normal pacemaker of the heart, called the Sino-Atrial or SA node. When the heart rhythm is no longer initiated in the SA node but is also initiating in various atrial foci then the heart rate can become irregular and can develop into atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter. Atrial fibrillation can become unstable when the heart rate is above 100. The risk of rapid atrial fibrillation is that the heart is not beating efficiently and the blood that is pooling in the atria of the heart can begin to clot, putting the person at a high risk of stroke or heart attack. This is the reason many people with atrial fibrillation or A-fib have to take blood thinners for the rest of their life. Other fast rhythms include supraventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, and ventricular tachycardia.[9] The heart rate can be approximated quickly by dividing 300 by the number of large boxes between two consecutive QRS complexes on the EKG paper.

Axis

QRS is upright in a lead when its axis is aligned with that lead's vector

The heart's electrical axis is the general direction of the ventricular depolarization wavefront (or mean electrical vector) in the sagittal plane (the plane of the limb leads and augmented limb leads). The QRS axis can be determined by looking for the limb lead or augmented limb lead with the greatest positive amplitude of its R wave. A lead can only detect changes in voltage that are aligned with that lead; therefore the lead that is best aligned with the axis of ventricular depolarization will have the tallest positive QRS complex.

The normal QRS axis is generally down and to the left, following the anatomical orientation of the heart within the chest. An abnormal axis suggests a change in the physical shape and orientation of the heart, or a defect in its conduction system that causes the ventricles to depolarize in an abnormal way.

Normal −30° to 90° Normal
Left axis deviation −30° to −90° May indicate left ventricular hypertrophy, left anterior fascicular block, or an old inferior q-wave myocardial infarction
Right axis deviation +90° to +180° May indicate right ventricular hypertrophy, left posterior fascicular block, or an old lateral q-wave myocardial infarction
Indeterminate axis +180° to −90° Rarely seen; considered an 'electrical no-man's land'

A normal axis can be quickly identified if the QRS complexes in leads I and aVF are both upright. Lead I is positioned at 0° and lead aVF is positioned at 90°. If the QRS is upright in both, its vector of depolarization must be somewhere between these two angles, and is therefore normal axis.

To make it easy to remember, if lead I is negative and lead II is positive so they are facing each other and if we imagine they are hands (we shake hands with the right hand so this is right axis deviation), Alansari Sign.

Amplitudes and intervals

Measuring time and voltage with ECG graph paper
Animation of a normal ECG wave

All of the waves on an EKG tracing and the intervals between them have a predictable time duration, a range of acceptable amplitudes (voltages), and a typical morphology. Any deviation from the normal tracing is potentially pathological and therefore of clinical significance.

For ease of measuring the amplitudes and intervals, an EKG is printed on graph paper at a standard scale: each 1 mm (one small box on the standard EKG paper) represents 40 milliseconds of time on the x-axis, and 0.1 millivolts on the y-axis.

Feature Description Pathology Duration
P wave The p-wave represents depolarization of the atria. Atrial depolarization spreads from the SA node towards the AV node, and from the right atrium to the left atrium. The p-wave is typically upright in most leads except for aVR; an unusual p-wave axis (inverted in other leads) can indicate an ectopic atrial pacemaker. If the p wave is of unusually long duration, it may represent atrial enlargement. Typically a large right atrium gives a tall, peaked p-wave while a large left atrium gives a two-humped bifid p-wave. <80 ms
PR interval The PR interval is measured from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS complex. This interval reflects the time the electrical impulse takes to travel from the sinus node through the AV node. A PR interval shorter than 120 ms suggests that the electrical impulse is bypassing the AV node, as in Wolf-Parkinson-White syndrome. A PR interval consistently longer than 200 ms diagnoses first degree atrioventricular block. The PR segment (the portion of the tracing after the p-wave and before the QRS complex) is typically completely flat, but may be depressed in pericarditis. 120 to 200 ms
QRS complex The QRS complex represents the rapid depolarization of the right and left ventricles. The ventricles have a large muscle mass compared to the atria, so the QRS complex usually has a much larger amplitude than the P-wave. If the QRS complex is wide (longer than 120 ms) it suggests disruption of the heart's conduction system, such as in LBBB, RBBB, or ventricular rhythms such as ventricular tachycardia. Metabolic issues such as severe hyperkalemia, or TCA overdose can also widen the QRS complex. An unusually tall QRS complex may represent left ventricular hypertrophy while a very low-amplitude QRS complex may represent a pericardial effusion or infiltrative myocardial disease. 80 to 100 ms
J-point The J-point is the point at which the QRS complex finishes and the ST segment begins. The J point may be elevated as a normal variant. The appearance of a separate J wave or Osborn wave at the J point is pathognomonic of hypothermia or hypercalcemia.[10]
ST segment The ST segment connects the QRS complex and the T wave; it represents the period when the ventricles are depolarized. It is usually isoelectric, but may be depressed or elevated with myocardial infarction or ischemia. ST depression can also be caused by LVH or digoxin. ST elevation can also be caused by pericarditis, Brugada syndrome, or can be a normal variant (J-point elevation).
T wave The T wave represents the repolarization of the ventricles. It is generally upright in all leads except aVR and lead V1. Inverted T waves can be a sign of myocardial ischemia, LVH, high intracranial pressure, or metabolic abnormalities. Peaked T waves can be a sign of hyperkalemia or very early myocardial infarction. 160 ms
Corrected QT interval The QT interval is measured from the beginning of the QRS complex to the end of the T wave. Acceptable ranges vary with heart rate, so it must be corrected by dividing by the square root of the RR interval. A prolonged QTc interval is a risk factor for ventricular tachyarrhythmias and sudden death. Long QT can arise as a genetic syndrome, or as a side effect of certain medications. An unusually short QTc can be seen in severe hypercalcemia. <440 ms
U wave The U wave is hypothesized to be caused by the repolarization of the interventricular septum. It normally has a low amplitude, and even more often is completely absent. If the U wave is very prominent, suspect hypokalemia, hypercalcemia or hyperthyroidism.[11]

Ischemia and infarction

Ischemia or non-ST elevation myocardial infarctions may manifest as ST depression or inversion of T waves.

ST elevation myocardial infarctions have different characteristic ECG findings based on the amount of time elapsed since the MI first occurred. The earliest sign is hyperacute T waves, peaked T-waves due to local hyperkalemia in ischemic myocardium. This then progresses over a period of minutes to elevations of the ST segment by at least 1 mm. Over a period of hours, a pathologic Q wave may appear and the T wave will invert. Over a period of days the ST elevation will resolve. Pathologic q waves generally will remain permanently.[12]

The coronary artery that has been occluded can be identified in an ST-elevation myocardial infarction based on the location of ST elevation. The LAD supplies the anterior wall of the heart, and therefore causes ST elevations in anterior leads (V1 and V2). The LCx supplies the lateral aspect of the heart and therefore causes ST elevations in lateral leads (I, aVL and V6). The RCA usually supplies the inferior aspect of the heart, and therefore causes ST elevations in inferior leads (II, III and aVF).

Artifacts

An EKG tracing is affected by patient motion. Some rhythmic motions (such as shivering or tremors) can create the illusion of cardiac dysrhythmia.[13] Artifacts are distorted signals caused by a secondary internal or external sources, such as muscle movement or interference from an electrical device.[14][15]

Distortion poses significant challenges to healthcare providers,[14] who employ various techniques[16] and strategies to safely recognize[17] these false signals.[medical citation needed] Accurately separating the ECG artifact from the true ECG signal can have a significant impact on patient outcomes and legal liabilities.[18][unreliable medical source?]

Electrodes and leads

Proper placement of the limb electrodes. The limb electrodes can be far down on the limbs or close to the hips/shoulders as long as they are placed symmetrically.[19]
Placement of the precordial electrodes

Ten electrodes are used for a 12-lead ECG. The electrodes usually consist of a conducting gel, embedded in the middle of a self-adhesive pad. The names and correct locations for each electrode are as follows:

Electrode name Electrode placement
RA On the right arm, avoiding thick muscle.
LA In the same location where RA was placed, but on the left arm.
RL On the right leg, lateral calf muscle.
LL In the same location where RL was placed, but on the left leg.
V1 In the fourth intercostal space (between ribs 4 and 5) just to the right of the sternum (breastbone).
V2 In the fourth intercostal space (between ribs 4 and 5) just to the left of the sternum.
V3 Between leads V2 and V4.
V4 In the fifth intercostal space (between ribs 5 and 6) in the mid-clavicular line.
V5 Horizontally even with V4, in the left anterior axillary line.
V6 Horizontally even with V4 and V5 in the midaxillary line.

The term "lead" in electrocardiography refers to the 12 different vectors along which the heart's depolarization is measured and recorded. There are a total of six limb leads and augmented limb leads arranged like spokes of a wheel in the coronal plane (vertical) and six precordial leads that lie on the perpendicular transverse plane (horizontal). In medical settings, the term leads is also sometimes used to refer to the ten electrodes themselves, although this is not technically a correct usage of the term.

Each of these leads represents the electrical potential difference between two points. For each lead, the positive pole is one of the ten electrodes. In bipolar leads, the negative pole is a different one of the electrodes, while in unipolar leads, the negative pole is a composite pole known as Wilson's central terminal.[20] Wilson's central terminal VW is produced by averaging the measurements from the electrodes RA, LA, and LL to give an average potential across the body:

In a 12-lead ECG, all leads except the limb leads are unipolar (aVR, aVL, aVF, V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, and V6).

Limb leads

File:EKG limb leads.png
The limb leads and augmented limb leads
File:Directions of EKG leads.png

Leads I, II and III are called the limb leads. The electrodes that form these signals are located on the limbs—one on each arm and one on the left leg.[21][22][23] The limb leads form the points of what is known as Einthoven's triangle.[24]

  • Lead I is the voltage between the (positive) left arm (LA) electrode and right arm (RA) electrode:
  • Lead II is the voltage between the (positive) left leg (LL) electrode and the right arm (RA) electrode:
  • Lead III is the voltage between the (positive) left leg (LL) electrode and the left arm (LA) electrode:

Augmented limb leads

Leads aVR, aVL, and aVF are the augmented limb leads. They are derived from the same three electrodes as leads I, II, and III, but they use Wilson's central terminal as their negative pole.

  • Lead augmented vector right (aVR)' has the positive electrode on the right arm. The negative pole is a combination of the left arm electrode and the left leg electrode:
  • Lead augmented vector left (aVL) has the positive electrode on the left arm. The negative pole is a combination of the right arm electrode and the left leg electrode:
  • Lead augmented vector foot (aVF) has the positive electrode on the left leg. The negative pole is a combination of the right arm electrode and the left arm electrode:

Together with leads I, II, and III, augmented limb leads aVR, aVL, and aVF form the basis of the hexaxial reference system, which is used to calculate the heart's electrical axis in the frontal plane.

Precordial leads

The precordial leads lie in the transverse (horizontal) plane, perpendicular to the other six leads. The six precordial electrodes act as the positive poles for the six corresponding precordial leads: (V1, V2, V3, V4, V5 and V6). Wilson's central terminal is used as the negative pole.

Specialized leads

Additional electrodes may rarely be placed to generate other leads for specific diagnostic purposes. Right sided precordial leads may be used to better study pathology of the right ventricle. Posterior leads may be used to demonstrate the presence of a posterior myocardial infarction. A Lewis lead (requiring an electrode at the right sternal border in the second intercostal space) can be used to study pathological rhythms arising in the right atrium.

An esophogeal lead can be inserted to a part of the tract where the distance to the posterior wall of the left atrium is only approximately 5–6 mm (remaining constant in people of different age and weight).[25] An esophageal lead avails for a more accurate differentiation between certain cardiac arrhythmias, particularly atrial flutter, AV nodal reentrant tachycardia and orthodromic atrioventricular reentrant tachycardia.[26] It can also evaluate the risk in people with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome, as well as terminate supraventricular tachycardia caused by re-entry.[26]

Lead locations on an EKG report

A standard 12-lead ECG report shows a 2.5 second tracing of each of the twelve leads. The tracings are most commonly arranged in a grid of four columns and three rows. the first column is the limb leads (I,II, and III), the second column is the augmented limb leads (aVR, aVL, and aVF), and the last two columns are the precordial leads (V1-V6).

Contiguity of leads

Diagram showing the contiguous leads in the same color

Each of the 12 ECG leads records the electrical activity of the heart from a different angle, and therefore align with different anatomical areas of the heart. Two leads that look at neighboring anatomical areas are said to be contiguous.

Category Leads Activity
Inferior leads' Leads II, III and aVF Look at electrical activity from the vantage point of the inferior surface (diaphragmatic surface of heart)
Lateral leads I, aVL, V5 and V6 Look at the electrical activity from the vantage point of the lateral wall of left ventricle
Septal leads V1 and V2 Look at electrical activity from the vantage point of the septal surface of the heart (interventricular septum)
Anterior leads V3 and V4 Look at electrical activity from the vantage point of the anterior wall of the right and left ventricles (Sternocostal surface of heart)

In addition, any two precordial leads next to one another are considered to be contiguous. For example, though V4 is an anterior lead and V5 is a lateral lead, they are contiguous because they are next to one another.

History

An early commercial ECG device (1911)

The etymology of the word is derived from the Greek electro, because it is related to electrical activity, kardio, Greek for heart, and graph, a Greek root meaning "to write".

Alexander Muirhead is reported to have attached wires to a feverish patient's wrist to obtain a record of the patient's heartbeat in 1872 at St Bartholomew's Hospital.[27] Another early pioneer was Augustus Waller, of St Mary's Hospital in London.[28] His electrocardiograph machine consisted of a Lippmann capillary electrometer fixed to a projector. The trace from the heartbeat was projected onto a photographic plate that was itself fixed to a toy train. This allowed a heartbeat to be recorded in real time.

An initial breakthrough came when Willem Einthoven, working in Leiden, the Netherlands, used the string galvanometer he invented in 1901.[29] This device was much more sensitive than both the capillary electrometer Waller used and the string galvanometer that had been invented separately in 1897 by the French engineer Clément Ader.[30] Einthoven assigned the letters P, Q, R, S, and T to the various deflections,[31] and described the electrocardiographic features of a number of cardiovascular disorders. In 1924, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his discovery.[32]

Though the basic principles of that era are still in use today, many advances in electrocardiography have been made over the years. Instrumentation has evolved from a cumbersome laboratory apparatus to compact electronic systems that often include computerized interpretation of the electrocardiogram.[33]

See also

Notes

The version with -K- reflects loanword origins from the German acronym EKG for Elektrokardiogramm (electrocardiogram),[34] with New Latin/international scientific vocabulary elektro- (cognate electro-) and kardi- (cognate cardi-), the latter from Greek kardia (heart).

References

  1. ^ "ECG- simplified. Aswini Kumar M.D." LifeHugger. Retrieved 11 February 2010.
  2. ^ Dubin, Dale Rapid Interpretation of EKG: an interactive course. Tampa, FL: Cover Pub., 2000. Print
  3. ^ Walraven, G. (2011). Basic arrhythmias (7th ed.), pp. 1–11
  4. ^ Braunwald E. (Editor), Heart Disease: A Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicine, Fifth Edition, p. 108, Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders Co., 1997. ISBN 0-7216-5666-8.
  5. ^ a b c d e Masters, Jo; Bowden, Carole; Martin, Carole (2003). Textbook of veterinary medical nursing. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 244. ISBN 0-7506-5171-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Moyer VA (2 October 2012). "Screening for coronary heart disease with electrocardiography: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement". Annals of Internal Medicine. 157 (7): 512–8. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-157-7-201210020-00514. PMID 22847227.
  7. ^ Consumer Reports; American Academy of Family Physicians; ABIM Foundation (April 2012), "EKGs and exercise stress tests: When you need them for heart disease — and when you don't" (PDF), Choosing Wisely, Consumer Reports, retrieved 14 August 2012
  8. ^ "Summary of Medical Standards" (PDF). U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. 2006. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  9. ^ Dale, Dubin Rapid Interpretation of EKG's: An Interactive Course. Tampa,FL:Cover Pub,. 2000. Print
  10. ^ The "Normothermic" Osborn Wave Induced by Severe Hypercalcemia
  11. ^ Andrew R Houghton; David Gray (27 January 2012). Making Sense of the ECG, Third Edition. Hodder Education. p. 214. ISBN 978-1-4441-6654-5. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
  12. ^ Alpert JS, Thygesen K, Antman E, Bassand JP (2000). "Myocardial infarction redefined—a consensus document of The Joint European Society of Cardiology/American College of Cardiology Committee for the redefinition of myocardial infarction". J Am Coll Cardiol. 36 (3): 959–69. doi:10.1016/S0735-1097(00)00804-4. PMID 10987628.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Segura-Sampedro Juan Jose, Parra-Lopez Loreto, Sampedro-Abascal Consuelo, Muñoz-Rodrıguez Juan Carlos, Atrial Flutter EKG can be useless without the proper electrophysiological basis, International Journal of Cardiology (2014), doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2014.10.076
  14. ^ a b Anesthesia & Analgesia: November 2006 - Volume 103 - Issue 5 - pp 1196-1204 doi: 10.1213/01.ane.0000247964.47706.5d
  15. ^ Kligfield, Paul; Gettes, Leonard S.; Bailey, James J.; Childers, Rory; Deal, Barbara J.; Hancock, E. William; van Herpen, Gerard; Kors, Jan A.; Macfarlane, Peter (13 March 2007). "Recommendations for the standardization and interpretation of the electrocardiogram: part I: The electrocardiogram and its technology: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association Electrocardiography and Arrhythmias Committee, Council on Clinical Cardiology; the American College of Cardiology Foundation; and the Heart Rhythm Society: endorsed by the International Society for Computerized Electrocardiology". Circulation. 115 (10): 1306–1324. doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.106.180200. ISSN 1524-4539. PMID 17322457.
  16. ^ http://northstarcpr.com/wordpress/ecg/tell-the-difference-between-artifact-and-ventricular-fibrillation-in-an-ecg/
  17. ^ Journal of Medical Case Reports 2007, 1:72 doi:10.1186/1752-1947-1-72
  18. ^ American Heart Journal: DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ahj.2014.02.007
  19. ^ RESTING 12-LEAD ECG ELECTRODE PLACEMENT AND ASSOCIATED PROBLEMS.DrTanzil
  20. ^ "Electrocardiogram Leads". CV Physiology. 26 March 2007. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  21. ^ "Lead Placement". Univ. of Maryland School of Medicine Emergency Medicine Interest Group. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  22. ^ "Limb Leads – ECG Lead Placement – Normal Function of the Heart – Cardiology Teaching Package – Practice Learning – Division of Nursing – The University of Nottingham". Nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  23. ^ "Lesson 1: The Standard 12 Lead ECG". Library.med.utah.edu. Archived from the original on 22 March 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2009. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  24. ^ "Electrocardiogram explanation image". Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  25. ^ Meigas, K; Kaik, J; Anier, A (2008). "Device and methods for performing transesophageal stimulation at reduced pacing current threshold". Estonian Journal of Engineering. 57 (2): 154. doi:10.3176/eng.2008.2.05. ISSN 1736-6038.
  26. ^ a b Pehrson, Steen M.; Blomströ-LUNDQVIST, Carina; Ljungströ, Erik; Blomströ, Per (1994). "Clinical value of transesophageal atrial stimulation and recording in patients with arrhythmia-related symptoms or documented supraventricular tachycardia-correlation to clinical history and invasive studies". Clinical Cardiology. 17 (10): 528–534. doi:10.1002/clc.4960171004. ISSN 0160-9289.
  27. ^ Ronald M. Birse,rev. Patricia E. Knowlden Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 (Subscription required) – (original source is his biography written by his wife – Elizabeth Muirhead. Alexandernn Muirhead 1848–1920. Oxford, Blackwell: privately printed 1926.)
  28. ^ Waller AD (1887). "A demonstration on man of electromotive changes accompanying the heart's beat". J Physiol (Lond). 8 (5): 229–34. PMC 1485094. PMID 16991463.
  29. ^ Rivera-Ruiz M, Cajavilca C, Varon J (29 September 1927). "Einthoven's String Galvanometer: The First Electrocardiograph". Texas Heart Institute journal / from the Texas Heart Institute of St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, Texas Children's Hospital. 35 (2): 174–8. PMC 2435435. PMID 18612490.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Interwoven W (1901). "Un nouveau galvanometre". Arch Neerl Sc Ex Nat. 6: 625.
  31. ^ Hurst JW (3 November 1998). "Naming of the Waves in the ECG, With a Brief Account of Their Genesis". Circulation. 98 (18): 1937–42. doi:10.1161/01.CIR.98.18.1937. PMID 9799216.
  32. ^ Cooper JK (1986). "Electrocardiography 100 years ago. Origins, pioneers, and contributors". N Engl J Med. 315 (7): 461–4. doi:10.1056/NEJM198608143150721. PMID 3526152.
  33. ^ Mark, Jonathan B. (1998). Atlas of cardiovascular monitoring. New York: Churchill Livingstone. ISBN 0-443-08891-8.
  34. ^ Merriam-Webster, Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Merriam-Webster.