Abstract
The electrocardiogram is indispensable for unravelling complex arrhythmias. Yet the tracing can lead the uninformed astray in the presence of the simplest disturbances of rhythm. Aberrant ventricular conduction is a common occurrence and it is the basis for much arrhythmic confusion. What looks ventricular in origin is not necessarily so; and although the philosophy Why diagnose when you can convert? is spreading in this age of electric miracles, more thoughtful therapists still know that there are practical as well as intellectual advantages in knowing what tachyrhythm confronts them. When a descending impulse reaches the ventricular conducting system and finds part of it blocked or refractory, the impulse is forced to travel by a devious route and writes an anomalous QRS complex. If this state of affairs is more or less permanent and the QRS-T pattern is characteristic, we call the disturbance bundle-branch block. If, however, the alteration in the QRS
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More From: JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association
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