Kudos go to Dr. Bryan Jarrett for an excellent interpretation!

 

Much discussion was had over this ECG.

There is an AV dissociation where the P waves march out.
There is a slightly wide QRS, but not that wide.

There is a small variability in the morphology of the QRS complexes.

 

All of these factors taken together lead to one of several options:

  1. AV dissociation with accelerated junctional rhythm
    1. Rare, unlikely as this patient was not on digoxin but not impossible
  2. Ventricular tachycardia with AV dissociation
    1. Idiopathic ventricular tachycardia difficult to diagnose
    2. Fascicular VT (narrow QRS 100-140 msec)
      1. Posterior fascicular 90-95% of the time, RBBB morphology with left axis deviation
      2. Anterior fascicular 5-10%, LBBB morphology with right axis deviation or inferior deviation
    3. Isorhythmic AV dissociation
      1. Another rare form of AV dissociation – sinus P waves and narrow QRS complexes where one beat is conducted and the next beat is an accelerated junctional beat at the same pace had the sinus beat been conducted
    4. Yet another rhythm?

Of these rhythms, several will respond to adenosine and Fascicular VT will often respond to verapamil. Our ECG has predominantly left bundle branch morphology and an inferior axis which may lend itself to anterior fascicular block and less likely accelerated junctional rhythm.

Remember our patient had this fast “AVNRT” rhythm (seen below) that “broke” into our rhythm in question after adenosine:

 

ecgfebpreadenosine

So while the best answer now is some form of VT with AV dissociation, possible anterior fascicular VT, further EP studies are needed to definitively diagnose this rhythm. Further discussion is welcome!

 

 

References:
Lifeinthefastlane.com articles on: RVOT, Accelerated Junctional Rhythm and Fascicular Tachycardia

Enyon, CA et al. Fascicular Tachycardia: uncommon or just unrecognized? Emerg Med J 2002;19:477-478

Francis J, et al. Idiopathic Fascicular Ventricular Tachycardia. Indian Pacing Electrophysiol J. 2004 Jul-Sep; 4(3): 98–103.

Mattu A, Brady W. ECGs for the Emergency Physician 2, BMJ Books 2008

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3 Comments

Ian deSouza · March 9, 2015 at 11:45 am

Great case. And thanks for providing the initial ECG. I just wonder what the specifics of the the response to adenosine were – transient termination? Retrograde VA block?. This information will help narrow the DDx.

This ECG looks similar to the post-adenosine ECG presented before except with a more rapid rate, not an AVNRT….

(Also, correction: fascicular VT not fascicular block VT.)

eabram · March 9, 2015 at 12:52 pm

This was the fastest ECG recorded for this patient on that day. There may have been a faster rate that did not get uploaded to the system. I’ll check for previous occasions of “AVNRT” when I can.

    jfreedman · March 21, 2015 at 7:19 am

    great case that generated lots discussion and comments and differentials. Not only did the ECG wizards of county get excited, but it was featured by Amal Mattu on his ECG weekly website just last week!

    https://ecgweekly.com/2015/03/amal-mattus-ecg-case-of-the-week-march-9-2015/

    The guru has a slightly different interpretation than some of the ECG heads here at County and one must defer.

    However, generating a differential and readdressing possibilities is an essential exercise with any clinical question. Great job, Bryan and Liz.

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