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Grier
Department of Biological Sciences
North Dakota State University
Fargo, ND 58102-3400
Provided for: Individuals who are interested in the subject and students/teachers in
college/university-level courses for introductory biology, human biology, human anatomy &
physiology, physical education, exercise science, sports medicine, intermediate and upper-level
physiology, pre-medical and beginning medical, as well as persons involved in
training/workshops/seminars for EMT/emergency and first responders, paramedics, public
health, military, fire and rescue, and veterinary science/technology. It may be used either for self
study, including by persons who are simply curious or out of concern for their own health, or as a
part of actual courses/seminars/workshops. This web site is a gateway to better understanding the
heart's electrical patterns. Hearts and ECGs are cool!
Table of Contents
Picking up ECG signals from body is a challenge for any project. During our experiments, we
found out these passive electrodes are the most reliable way to connect to body for picking up of
ECG signals for further processing by electronics. Interface to these electrode is via commonly
available 4mm banana plugs (Same used in multimeter leads). You can even use readily available
multimeter leads as interfacing cables, thus simplifying your stage till picking up signals so you
can concentrate on making electronics work.
Since, these are procured from professional medical supply so are little bit high on cost but
should be reliable enough to get result in your projects.
After pickup from electrodes you can process the signal in Opamps
likeAD620 or INA333 or TI's ECG Front End ICs. You can refer to these two IC's datasheet and
their application notes for ECG processing idea.
The heart itself is a complex organ and the electrical patterns coming from it can seem very
complex, confusing, and even overwhelming. ECGs are usually run in a medical/clinical
environment involving abnormalities and problems. Most training and learning of ECGs and the
associated terminology and jargon involves medically-related persons. However, most of the
billions of hearts in the world keep ticking away day in and day out with their everyday normal
patterns. Many biologists, biology teachers and students, and other people find the normal heart
and its outputs to be interesting!
For over three decades of teaching a variety of introductory biology and anatomy & physiology
courses at North Dakota State University, I included the heart's electrical activity in both lectures
and labs, for both medical and non-medical students. Our equipment over this period changed
from old, bulky "physiographs" with liquid ink tracing pens to smaller computer-based machines
and various software, from primitive to more advanced. We recently switched to standard
(clinical type) 12-lead and Holter PC-based units for pre-professional students who will
eventually encounter the standard ECG machines as well as other students who might either be
just plain interested or else encounter problems with their own hearts and end up getting 12-lead
ECGs run on themselves in a clinical environment.
Standard ECGs, however, have a fairly steep learning curve, with most of the training and
educational material focused on the medical student. It is possible, however, to introduce the
subject to virtually anyone who is interested or needs to understand it to whatever degree.
The purpose of this web site is to open the door to the subject in as plain of language and
explanation as possible for as wide of an audience as possible, including both for future medical
practioners and the general student/public. It is focused on the normal ECG. (It is with all of the
various and sundry abnormalities that the subject really gets out of hand!) Disclaimer: the intent
of this site is for educational purposes only, NOT diagnostic. ECGs are complex with many
subtle variations and can be difficult or misleading to interpret. Full and proper analysis requires
much specialized training and experience. Most non-medical instructors (and even some who are
medical instructors) do not have the expertise for diagnostic interpretations of abnormal ECGs
and might not even be able to detect some abnormal situations. Most, if not all, ECGs that are
run on students in a classroom setting or by persons on themselves will be normal. However, if
anyone encounters something on an ECG that appears like it might be suspicious or not normal,
the person should see a physician and have another ECG run under proper clinic or hospital
diagnostic conditions and read by someone who is fully trained in ECG interpretation.
Well, let's start with the basic object of interest, the heart, and make sure we know where it is in
the body and how it operates. It is in the chest cavity just under the sternum, as shown on the
following models.
Contractions of skeletal (voluntary) muscles are initiated directly from the nervous system
whereas contractions of heart muscle are initiated internally, in the muscle fibers themselves, and
are only speeded up or slowed down by the nervous system (and a variety of chemical factors).
The process involves movements of ions in and out of the muscle cells and cellular
depolarization and repolarization. For more on all of that, refer to a basic biology textbook.
For our interest, electrical activity from the muscular contractions spreads throughout the body
and can be detected on the surface on the skin. Contacts on the skin are called electrodes or
"leads" which connect to the recording/measuring devices, or ECG machines.
The main, typical waves of an ECG are identified as P, Q, R, S, and T (the symbols A, B, C, ...
and X, Y, Z etc. had already been used for other physiologically-related items at the time when
the system was first developed). Note: all of the waves do not appear on all recordings and there
are also some other waves (with other names) that sometimes show up. The following recording,
for example, does not show a "Q" wave, a downward wave just before the R wave, although the
position of a Q wave (when present) is shown.
The pattern can be broken down separately for the atria and ventricles as follow:
The specific appearance of a tracing depends on the location of the electrode (position on the
body and, for those leads within a few centimeters on the heart, on the chest, the distance from
the heart) and what the heart's electrical activity is doing (resting or active, normal vs various
abnormalities, etc.).
Healthy hearts vary (somewhat like fingerprints) in their performance and output but produce a
normal range of values. When something in the heart isnt working correctly as a result of
disease, accidents, or genetic and developmental malformations, the signals are different or
abnormal (and require a trained physician or specialist to diagnose).
In addition to Lead I which was shown above, there are several other leads that provide different
views of the electrical activity. Their polarities and measurements are all manipulated by the
ECG machine. The other leads are shown in the following figures.
Note that even though there are "12 leads", there are only 10 actual contacts on the body.
There are 9 recording leads (3 on the limbs [right arm, left arm, and left leg] plus 6 on the chest
over various parts of the heart) and a 10th neutral or ground lead attached to the right leg. The
remaining 3 leads representing the limbs are called "augmented" leads, which are derived from
vectored combinations of the other 3 actual limb leads and provide different angles of view.
The various limb leads together provide a frontal view of the heart. (Always keep in mind that
left and right orientation are relative to the subject, not the observer.)
The remaining 6 leads are located across the chest and provide a cross-sectional view of the
heart. They go by several names: "precordial" ("in front of the heart"), "pericardial" ("around the
heart"), or simply the "chest" leads.
V1 through V6, starting over the right atrium with V1, and placed in a semi-circle of positions
leftwards, to the left side of the left ventricle. V1 and V2, on the right and left sides respectively,
are placed just off the sternum at the 4th intercostal spaces (the space between the 4th and 5th
ribs, which can be felt through the skin) and the others travel around to V6under the armpit, as
shown in the diagram.
[Detailed instructions for placing the leads:
Limb leads: Arms (RA, LA) anywhere from the upper arm to the wrists
Legs (RL, LL) anywhere from the thigh to the ankles
(positions of limb leads or their distances from heart are not critical, as long as
they are more than 10 cm [4 inches] from the heart)
Chest leads:V1 to the right of the sternum, next to it, in the space between ribs 4 and 5
V2 as V1 but to the left of the sternum
V3 halfway between V2 and V4 (see next one)
V4 below the middle of the clavicle, between ribs 5 and 6
V5 left of V4, halfway between V4 and V6 (see next one)
V6 on same horizontal line with V4 and V5, below middle of armpit]
The normal progression of muscular contractions, hence, electrical activity, travels from the
upper right part of the atria downward and leftwards to the ventricles, with the left ventricle
being the strongest. This leads to a topic of ECG interpretation involving the electrical "axis" of
the heart, which is mostly beyond this introduction. However, for a general picture: The pattern
on any one lead, and all of the leads taken together, represents a view of the sum of all of the
vectors from contractions of the different muscle fibers in the various parts of the heart. The total
picture for any given wave (P, R, T) is the heart's electrical axis, which normally is from the
upper, posterior right side of the heart (in the right atrium) to the lower point of the ventricles in
a left direction. For example, the normal axis should generally be a combination toward the left
(that is, upward in lead I) and toward the feet (that is, tracing upward also in aVF). Further
details of the axis are determined by the direction of the traces in the other leads.
Various combinations of limb leads and chest leads taken together provide a three-dimensional
view into the electrical activity and workings of the heart for anyone who knows how to read an
ECG. A heart attack and resulting damaged or dead portions of the heart, for example, can
greatly affect the summed vectors, hence, the axes of the various waves.
Various abnormalities including heart attacks, arrhythmias, congenital problems, and a host of
diseases and factors that affect the heart will cause sometimes major and sometimes subtle
changes to the ECG patterns, which can be interpreted by a trained, experienced observer.
Now we can return to a standard 12-lead ECG print and begin to make sense of it. It shows each
of the 12 leads in their own segments on the page. Given even a rudimentary understanding,
hopefully as provided above, you can interpret some of the variations among the different leads,
as shown in the following figures. The figures also illustrate some of the other components of a
typical ECG, including a rhythm trace, calibration boxes, etc. This is an example of a "normal"
ECG.
To help further understand this and get some hands-on experience, see the section on References
and further information: texts and website links, as well as consider doing some exercises as
described in the next section.
Exercises
We incorporate ECG topics into a human anatomy and physiology lab as well as a general
biology physiology lab in our Department of Biological Sciences at North Dakota State
University. We demonstrate both the standard resting 12-lead and Holter ECGs, with students
comparing patterns from resting vs exercising (by running up and down a set of stairs while
wearing the Holter).
For resting 12-lead recordings in clinical settings, the subject normally lies down flat on the
back. For demonstration purposes, however, sitting up quietly on a chair also usually works.
Sometimes the recordings show differences between sitting and reclining and sometimes not, but
for non-clinical recordings, including on oneself, sitting is more convenient.
To demonstrate the effects (and artifacts) on a resting ECG caused by electrical activity from the
skeletal/voluntary muscles in the body, the subject can move his or her arms or flex/tense the
body's muscles. That will produce striking results on a resting 12-lead setup!
If one is set up to run stress-tests, that could be used for comparisons with resting ECGs as an
alternative to using Holter units.
The measurements done in our introductory biology lab are mostly just of the basic ECG pattern
and simple resting versus exercise differences (and similarities). In the anatomy and physiology
lab, however, we go more into the clinically-related aspects of the pattern, such as PR and QT
intervals. For that, I have put together a table of normal values, as shown below. (For
a downloadable / printable version, click here. Feel free to make copies of it and/or revise and
incorporate it into other versions for your own purposes. [My "copyright" is simply to insure my
own free access to this stuff, so I don't end up having to get permission or pay for my own things
from someone else who takes and copyrights it.])
For an additional link to a normal ECG which also includes (by scrolling down to it) a table of
normal boundaries and possible abnormalities (and links) outside of those boundaries, click
here.
If interested in our lab manual chapters that incorporate the ECG topics, additional information
and instructions for the class teaching assistants, or any related questions, please send an e-mail
to me at: james.grier@ndsu.edu.
standard vertical format, which makes it handy for including full-scale ECGs, but it is awkward
to read.
T.B. Garcia and N.E. Holtz. 2003. Introduction to 12-lead ECG: The Art of
Interpretation. Jones & Bartlett Publ. Sudbury, MA.536 pp. ISBN 0-7637-1961-7. Essentially
the basic material from their more complete 2001 book. The first 72 pages, all basic material, of
both books are the same. After the first 72 pages, this book then distills the subsequent material
with reworking and additional illustrations. It is a less bulky book, at less than half the thickness
and weight of the 2001 book. It shares with the 2001 book the same horizontal and awkward
format (but also many of the full-scale ECGs).
T.B. Garcia and G.T. Miller. 2004. Arrhythmia Recognition: The Art of
Interpretation. Jones & Bartlett Publ. Sudbury, MA.633 pp. ISBN 0-7637-2246-4. This book is
by the same first author as the two above, but it is focused on arrhythmia topics. It begins with
much of the same basic material, so any of these three books would be equally useful for
introductory topics, but even that material has been reworked and improved slightly (it is good
even in the 2001 book, but even better here). I would regard this book as a companion to either
of the other two, although it would probably be best with the more thorough 2001 version for the
more advanced topics (of which much in the arrhythmia book would be).
J.M. Green and A.J. Chiaramida. 2003. 12-lead EKG Confidence: Step-by-Step to
Mastery. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Philadelphia, PA. 435 pp. ISBN 0-7817-3921-7. A
useful book including many examples with their interpretations. The writing is perhaps less
readable at the introductory level than the others in this list and I would not recommend it as the
first or only book. But it is good for the examples and a somewhat different approach, after using
one or more of the other books to begin with.
Thaler, M.S. 2003. The Only EKG Book You'll Ever Need. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Philadelphia, PA. 317 pp. ISBN 0-7817-3921-7. A very readable, concise, and helpful
introduction. It is well illustrated with segments that pertain to the points at hand, although it
lacks examples of complete 12-lead ECGs.
system and is usually the most expensive part! If you get ECG equipment without the software,
you might as well have nothing. To get the necessary software might cost as much as a new
system to begin with and you would be better off starting with that in the first place, as it will
also include warranty, service, and consultation.
There are also low-priced but excellent 1- to 3-lead systems. Many of these are now available at
much lower cost than full 12-lead clinical units and they can be used on the various locations of
the body to achieve 12-lead results. These are great for personal home use and also for many
educational purposes. They provide ECG recordings for lead I, from the right to left limbs, or the
electrodes can be positioned at different locations on the limbs and chest for the other leads, one
lead at a time. Some have built-in electrodes that work with direct finger of skin contact and do
not require cables and adhesive skin electrodes, but they also have the cables and can use
electrodes for more stable recordings if desired. I have tested and highly recommend the ones
fromFavoriteplus.com. They are a worldwide distributor of pulse oximeters, handheld ECGEKG, and fetal Dopplers. Other sources for educational and combination physiological systems
includeVernier (their EKG sensor also requires an interface to connect to a computer),
and iWorx.
Electrodes can be obtained from an ECG supplier such as Nasiff, a local or online medical
supplier, or the eBay link above.
Many, if not most, persons reading ECGs use a divider style caliper to measure the various
characteristics of the recordings. Measurements can also be made for most practical educational
purposes simply with a metric ruler or measuring caliper such as a dial or electronic caliper. A
good, low-priced ECG caliper is the Alvin 5 1/2 inch divider, model 560, available online or
check with your local book store, art, or drafting store, and see if they either stock or can order
them.