ECG LEADS Chapter 3. introduction The heart produces electrical currents The body acts as a...

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ECG LEADS Chapter 3
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Transcript of ECG LEADS Chapter 3. introduction The heart produces electrical currents The body acts as a...

ECG LEADS

Chapter 3

introduction

The heart produces electrical currents

The body acts as a conductor of electricity

introduction

An ECG is a recording of the electrical activity of the heart

Different “views” of the heart can be recorded using different electrodes

INtroduction

Electrodes are able to measure the voltages of the cardiac current

Electrodes

Electrodes

V1: Fourth intercostal space to the right of the sternum.

V2: Fourth intercostal space to the Left of the sternum.

V3: Directly between leads V2 and V4.

V4: Fifth intercostal space at midclavicular line.

V5: Level with V4 at left anterior axillary line.

V6: Level with V5 at left midaxillary line. (Directly under the midpoint of the armpit)

Electrode and Lead are not the same thing.

Leads

12 possible leads

Six limb (extremity) leads

Bipolar leads: I, II, and III

Unipolar leads: aVR, aVL, aVF

Six chest (precordial) leads

limb leads

Electrodes

Right arm

Left arm

Left leg

Right leg (ground)

lead i

LA = electrical voltages of the heart that are transmitted to the left arm

RA = electrical voltages of the heart that are transmitted to the right arm

The electrocardiograph sustracts RA from LA and the difference appears as lead I.

lead i

Lead one ‘travels’ horizontally.

Its left pole (LA) is postive and its right pole (RA) is negative.

Therefore, lead I = LA minus RA

Shows a positive wave when an impluses moves towards the left arm, negative wave when an impuse moves away from the left arm.

Lead II

Lead II points downward diagonally

Lower pole (LL) is positive and upper pole (RA) is negative.

Lead II = LL minus RA

Lead III

Lead III points downward diagonally

Lower pole (LL) is positive and upper pole (LA) is negative.

Lead III = LL minus LA

Bipolar Leads

Unipolar or Augmented limb leads

Record the electrical voltages at one location rather than relative to the voltage at another electrode

limb leads

aVR + aVL + aVF = 0

Bipolar leads & Unipolar (or augmented) leads

Frontal plane

Limb leads

Limb leads

chest leads

V1 to V6

unipolar

horizontal plane

front to back

Chest Leads

ALL 12 leads

Frontal Plane

Horizontal Plane

Monitor leads

12 leads are not always necessary

Sample of a monitor lead

V1 (positive)

Right shoulder (negative)

Left shoulder (ground)

Holter Monitors