The ECG Quiz User Manual

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guidelines

General Interpretation Guidelines

These guidelines describe the criteria used to annotate ECGs in The ECG Quiz. They ensure consistency, reproducibility, and accurate scoring. You should follow these same rules when entering your diagnoses.

Important
Be sure to read how Differential Diagnoses and Multiple Interpretations are handled in The ECG Quiz.

Rate-Based Definitions

Diagnosis Definition
Bradycardia A rhythm ≤ 60 bpm for ≥ 3 consecutive RR intervals
Tachycardia A rhythm ≥ 100 bpm for ≥ 3 consecutive RR intervals
Sinus Arrest Sinus node inactivity ≥ 3 seconds
Ventricular Asystole Ventricular inactivity ≥ 3 seconds

First-Degree AV Block Criteria

Block Type Definition
First-Degree AV Block PR interval ≥ 200 ms

Premature Complexes

Premature complexes are included only if they are not already accounted for by another rhythm diagnosis.

Include Premature Atrial Complexes (PAC), Premature Junctional Complexes (PJC), and Premature Ventricular Complexes (PVC) when:

  • One or more premature beats are present
  • They are not part of another diagnosis

Examples:

  • Ventricular Tachycardia with no other PVCs → DO NOT include PVCs (because VT already explains them).
  • Ventricular Bigeminy transitioning to Normal Sinus Rhythm with isolated PVCs → Include PVCs, because they occur outside the pattern.

Bigeminy / Trigeminy / Quadrigeminy

Include these diagnoses when there are ≥ 3 consecutive cycles of the repeating pattern.


Sinus Rhythm Categories

Sinus Rhythm is a supercategory, not synonymous with Normal Sinus Rhythm.

Only use Sinus Rhythm when one of the specific sinus subcategories cannot be determined.

Diagnosis Sinus Rate
Marked Sinus Bradycardia < 40 bpm
Sinus Bradycardia ≥ 40 bpm and < 60 bpm
Normal Sinus Rhythm ≥ 60 bpm and < 100 bpm
Sinus Tachycardia ≥ 100 bpm

Important Notes

  • Sinus Rhythm ≠ Normal Sinus Rhythm.
  • Entering inus Rhythm when the correct answer is Normal Sinus Rhythm will produce:
    • A False Positive for “Sinus Rhythm”
    • A False Negative for missing “Normal Sinus Rhythm”

Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia (MAT) & Wandering Atrial Pacemaker (WAP)

Include these diagnoses when the ECG contains:

  • 3 distinct P-wave morphologies
  • No dominant P-wave shape
  • Variable P–P intervals (irregular atrial pacemaking)

Rate-based differentiation:

Diagnosis Venticular Rate
Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia 100 bpm
Wandering Atrial Pacemaker < 100 bpm

Junctional Rhythms

Include junctional rhythms when ≥ 3 consecutive junctional beats occur at the following rates:

Rhythm Rate
Junctional Bradycardia < 40 bpm
Junctional Rhythm / Junctional Escape Rhythm ≥ 40 bpm and < 60 bpm
Accelerated Junctional Rhythm ≥ 60 bpm and < 100 bpm
Junctional Tachycardia ≥ 100 bpm

Permanent Junctional Reciprocating Tachycardia (PJRT)

PJRT is a rare, often incessant orthodromic AV reentrant tachycardia using a slow, concealed accessory pathway. It may occur in children or young adults and can lead to tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy.

ECG Characteristics

  • Inverted P waves in II, III, aVF, and lateral precordial leads
  • Long RP interval (RP > PR) due to slow retrograde conduction
  • Shorter PR interval compared to the RP interval
  • Narrow-complex tachycardia, often continuous/incessant
  • 1:1 AV conduction ratio
  • PJRT may present with normal or mildly elevated ventricular rates (60–100 bpm)

For full PJRT educational content, see the dedicated page if available.


Additional Interpretation Guidelines

References

References will be added soon.

guidelines.txt · Last modified: 2025/11/28 18:47 by dtong

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