Strip 28

atrial flutter


First Glance:

From across the room it looks like a supraventricular rhythm with grouped beats of three.

Discussion:

Grouped beats could mean all kinds of things. A second degree block, regular premature ectopy (bigeminy, trigeminy, etc), various supraventricular rhythms with variable blocks, and then a few really unusual entities. This particular strip is tricky- partly because it is tricky, and partly because it has (per usual) diminutive voltages which makes analysis of the atrial activity tricky. What a shame that this lead is gained down to 30%.

Did you see any regularity in the baseline? Your best bet of discovering something subtle is looking at the flat sections of baseline before the first QRS of a group (where the leftover T’s and U’s from the last group will no longer be present).

Here’s what I see:

There are regular negative deflections (green triangles) in the baseline. The rate is around 300. This could be atrial flutter, with the rest of the F waves overrun by the QRS’s and the T waves that follow those QRS’s. In that case, this would be aflutter with a variable block. Usually it’s 2:1, but then occasionally it jumps up to 4:1 every third beat. This is actually a common pattern in my experience, although usually it is alternating 2:1 -> 4:1 -> 2:1 -> etc.

This is where the hidden F waves are:

They are hard to pick out because they are slathered on top of the T waves and QRS’s, but the correlation seems consistent and the interval between the preceding F wave and the first QRS of each group is very regular.

Here’s more strip:

Do you see it? It’s hard to be 100% sure from this strip. If you could see longer pauses you might seal the diagnosis, so you could try some vagal maneuvers to try to get some transient 6:1 or longer block, or you could give adenosine, or you could stop messing around, gain the strip up, and get a 12L!

The P waves are probably not ectopic atrial tachycardia as they are the fast side for that rhythm. It’s still a possiblity though, but flutter just fits better here.

What’s the heartrate? Count 3 second blocks. I count 11 beats in 2 blocks which makes about 110 a minute– for once the monitor and I agree.

Final Impression?

Atrial flutter with 2:1 -> 2:1 -> 4:1 variable block, ventricular rate is 110.

Management implications:

Increase the gain to see the P waves. Confirm with 12L. A lewis lead could clarify atrial activity if still in doubt.

 The Take-home Point:

Atrial flutter, in my experience, is the great imitator. A classic flutter strip might be easy, but if you have a 2:1 block (common) or the F waves are not visible or obvious (common) or the block is variable than it can look like all manner of supraventricular rhythms, and can be irregularly irregular.

I have read somewhere that atrial flutter seems to be predisposed to even-numbered blocks (2:1, 4:1) although not every expert agrees. In my experience aflutter with variable block tends to be regularly irregular (as we see here, or with the alternating 2:1 -> 4:1 pattern mentioned earlier), but often there are odd-numbered and variably variable blocks which can look just like afib if the F waves aren’t obvious.

Of note: if you are seeing aflutter with a high-grade block (think 4:1 or above), consider dig toxicity. Dig is especially likely to cause flutter with a high-grade block because it both predisposes to supraventricular ectopy/flutter, and slows the AV node.

It’s worth keeping atrial flutter on the differential because it’s treatment and prognosis is significantly different from most of the other supraventricular tachycardias.

 

 

3purple_star Three star strip. Devious stuff.

 

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