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It's the ECG's that george rejects that makes George's ECG's the best.
Pædiatric SVT
Report: Orthodromic atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardia 333/min Possible flutter with 1:1 conduction Left bundle branch block ?Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome ( see below) Comment: The rate is very fast, but an infant’s flutter can be much faster s
Runs of Anomalous Conduction
Report :WPW syndrome Atrial fibrillation Runs of anomalous conduction (Wolff-Parkinson-White type ‘A’) Borderline small voltage and T wave changes in frontal leads Comment :Syndrome, rather than mere conduction, because of the arrhythmia. The patient
WPW ‘A’ in AF: Positive Concordant Precordial Pattern
Report:Atrial fibrillation with (very) rapid ventricular response. Anomalous conduction (WPW type ‘A’) Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Comment:The rate approaches 300/min but is obviously irregular. The trace is pathognomonic of WPW. The positive concor
Dangerous WPW Syndrome
Report: Atrial fibrillation Rapid response 240-300/min Anomalous (WPW) conduction, type ‘B’ Comment: If the observed cycle lengths during atrial fibrillation are less than 0.25” (250 milliseconds sounds more ‘learned’ in this context), the patient is
Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome Type ‘A’ Diagnosed as VT
Report:Atrial fibrillation with rapid response 177/min Anomalous conduction except for last three beats WPW syndrome Comment:This is a fairly typical example, showing either completely anomalous or completely normal complexes. The Cardiology Registrar
WPW ‘A’ Mime of Inferoposterior Infarction
Report:Sinus rhythm 68/min Wolff-Parkinson-White type ‘A’ conduction Comment:The QRS appears narrow and the PR interval normal in several – in fact, most – leads. On the other hand, the latter is completely effaced by a δ wave in V2 and V3. There is con