Skip to main content
Home
Understanding the Electrocardiogram

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Understanding ECGs
    • Introduction
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Understanding the Electrocardiogram In Health & Disease
  3. 7.0.0 Tachycardias- Introduction
  4. 7.3.0 Atrial Flutter and Fibrillation (frame 93)
  5. 7.3.20 (frame 113)

7.3.23 (116)

In some patients, the fibrillatory waves may be unusually prominent or coarse in one or more leads. The ECG shown here is from an 86 year old male. It demonstrates unusually prominent fibrillatory waves in lead V1 that could have been mistaken for type II flutter. Coarse atrial fibrillation is thought to be more common in the patients with the more dilated atria.

Book traversal links for 7.3.23 (116)

  • 7.3.22 (115)
  • Up
  • 7.3.24 (117)

Site is under construction

Book navigation

  • Introduction to First Edition
  • 1.0.0 Generation of the ECG
  • 2.0.0 The Normal Electrocardiogram
  • 3.0.0 Inter and intra-ventricular Conduction Disturbances
  • 4.0.0 Ventricular Hypertrophy
  • 5.0.0 ELECTROLYTE ABNORMALITIES, DRUG EFFECTS AND THE LONG QT SYNDROMES
  • 6.0.0 Ischemia and Infarction - Introduction (frame i and ii)
  • 7.0.0 Tachycardias- Introduction
    • 7.1.0 Mechanisms of arrhythmias-frame 1
    • 7.2.0 Narrow Complex Rhythms (frame 38)
    • 7.3.0 Atrial Flutter and Fibrillation (frame 93)
      • 7.3.1 (94)
      • 7.3.2 (95)
      • 7.3.3 (96)
      • 7.3.4 (97)
      • 7.3.5 (98)
      • 7.3.6 (99)
      • 7.3.7 (100)
      • 7.3.8 (101)
      • 7.3.9 (102)
      • 7.3.10 (frame 103)
      • 7.3.20 (frame 113)
        • 7.3.21 (114)
        • 7.3.22 (115)
        • 7.3.23 (116)
        • 7.3.24 (117)
        • 7.3.25 (118)
        • 7.3.26 (119)
        • 7.3.27 (120)
        • 7.3.28 (121)
    • 7.4.0 Wide Complex Beats and Rhythms (frame 122)
  • 8.0.0 The Bradycardias frame i-introduction
  • 9.0.0 The ECG of Heart Murmurs-introduction
  • 10.0.0 The Electrocardiogram in the Emergency Department-Introduction
Powered by Drupal