Are p and r wave amplitudes affected by pacing
- by Mae11
- 2021-07-13 23:09:35
- General Posting
- 681 views
- 3 comments
I'm trying so hard to understand this, but I'm confused. I was just reading my operation report trying to take a few things in.
It says that my p waves are 4.1mv and r waves are >12mv.
What does this mean?
3 Comments
Still kinda confused..
by Mae11 - 2021-07-14 00:06:40
Hmm, okay. So do these numbers seem normal? Everything I am seeing says that they are far above the normal standard. I've seen that p wave shouldn't exceed 0.3 mv and r wave standard is 1.2.
Pacing P&R waves
by Selwyn - 2021-07-14 07:32:27
Difficult to interpret these figures as they are dependent on the type of pacing set up you receive ( eg.DDDR) and where your pacing leads are situated. If your echocardiogram has been reported as normal, you can forget about ECG P, R, voltages.
In general, for non paced people- big Ps are for big atria, big Rs for big ventricles.
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P and R waves
by AgentX86 - 2021-07-13 23:56:12
If you're not actively pacing (sensing), no, the pacemaker is just watching what what the heart is doing. If you're pacing, sure, it affects the P and R waves. It's creating one, or the other, or both. The P wave is the atria depolarizing and the QRS complex is the ventricles depolarizing. The pacemaker is triggering these events.