Retrograde First Degree Ventriculoatrial Block

Report:

Junctional rhythm 37/min

Retrograde 1o ventriculoatrial (VA) block

VA interval 0.28”

Right bundle branch block

QRS 0.14”

Probable old inferoposterolateral infarction

Nonspecific ST/T changes

Comment:

The retrograde P waves are small and narrow (as they sometimes are) but their direction is unmistakably retrograde: inverted in the inferior leads and upright in the remaining three frontal leads. Their place in the conduction sequences also leaves no doubt that they are retrograde.

Conduction sequences?

The Q waves in the anterolateral leads and L2 are pathological, with a borderline Q in aVF and upright T (despite RBBB) in V1. This supports the history of myocardial infarction and its topography may explain the difficulties in impulse generation and conduction in this patient (he was later paced).

Below (Fig 1a) is another trace taken a little earlier, showing allorhythmic junctional trigeminy in which the second beat of each sequence is almost certainly a reentry (echo) beat. The retrograde P waves (arrows) are midway between the first and the second complex in each group, attesting to the usual equivalence of antegrade and retrograde conduction times.

The patient’s sinus P waves are shown in Fig 1b, for comparison. The native PR interval is shorter than the programmed AV interval, a fact revealed by the failure of the slow-rising QRS to inhibit, in most cases, the barren pacing spike.

If you have any suggestions for or feedback on this report, please let us know.