Imagine this: It’s 2 AM, you’re the on-call Medical Officer or night shift House Officer, and the nurse hands you an ECG. The patient complained of sudden onset of chest pain and palpitations. Worst Case Scenario: You hesitate, unsure of what you’re seeing. The delay leads to missed intervention, and suddenly, your patient crashes.
(1) Check ECG details
- Confirm patient name & date to ensure is the right ECG
- Check calibration. Standard settings: 25 mm/s, 10 mm/mV
(2) Rhythm – Is it sinus rhythm or something else?
- P waves before every QRS?
- If Yes = Sinus rhythm
- No P waves or irregular rhythm?
- Consider atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, or junctional rhythms
- PR interval: 0.12-0.20 sec
(3) Calculate the heart rate (based on rhythm regularity)
- Regular rhythm: Use the 300 Rule: 300 ÷ number of large squares between two R waves.
- Irregular rhythm: Count R waves in 6 seconds (30 big boxes) and multiply by 10.
- Normal range: 60-100 beats per minute
(4) Determine axis
Lead I & aVF QUADRANT approach:
- Normal axis: both positive
- Left axis deviation: Lead I positive, aVF negative
- Right axis deviation: Lead I negative, aVF positive
(5) ST Segment & T Waves — look for ischaemic changes
- Any ST Elevation?
- Consider STEMI (especially if it occurs at contiguous leads). Look for reciprocal changes.
- Any ST Depression?
- Any T wave inversion?
(6) Look for heart block
Bundle branch block
- Left Bundle Branch Block (LBBB): “WiLLiaM”
- V1: W-shaped (deep S wave)
- V6: M-shaped (broad, notched R wave)
- Right Bundle Branch Block (RBBB): “MaRRoW”
- V1: M-shaped (rSR’ pattern, “rabbit ears”)
- V6: W-shaped (deep S wave)
Atrioventricular block
- First degree heart block: PR interval >200 ms (5 small boxes), but all P waves are followed by QRS complexes; regular ventricular rate
- Second-degree heart block
- Mobitz Type I: Progressive lengthening of PR interval, followed by a non-conducted P wave (a QRS complex is dropped), i.e., a beat is skipped
- Mobitz Type II: Sudden dropped QRS complexes without prior PR prolongation. (PR interval is constant, with intermittent non-conducted P waves)
- Third-Degree Heart Block (Complete heart block): No relationship between P waves and QRS complexes

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