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Re: P-Wave February 14, 2024 02:53PM |
Admin Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 5,856 |
Re: P-Wave February 14, 2024 04:40PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 14, 2024 07:59PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 15, 2024 07:56AM |
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Re: P-Wave February 15, 2024 06:35PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 15, 2024 09:52PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 16, 2024 12:53AM |
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Joe
What's the difference between irregular heart rate and heart rate variability (HRV)?
Re: P-Wave February 16, 2024 02:54PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 16, 2024 03:30PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 01:15AM |
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GeorgeN
What's the difference between irregular heart rate and heart rate variability (HRV)?
To give you an order of magnitude, 1 second = 1000 milliseconds (ms). Sixty beats/minutes (BPM) = 1 beat/second. A variance of 100 ms would be 6 BPM. My 30 something daughter has HRV around 120 ms, I have 40-50 ms. In afib, it is not uncommon to have a beats go from 60 BPM to 120. With PAC's, you could have a 60 BPM rate go to 160 BPM for one beat. As you can see the magnitude is hugely different for HRV vs. irregular heart rate. Also, the variability in afib is irregularly irregular.
Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 02:59AM |
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Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 04:15PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 04:55PM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 219 |
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Carey
My P waves are undetectable by a Kardia (or probably any consumer device) and on a 12-lead they're very small. But my pulse is regular as a rock, so I know with certainty I'm in NSR. Everyone who looks at my ECGs notes the diminutive P waves, but none of them have mistaken it for afib.
Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 04:55PM |
Admin Registered: 7 years ago Posts: 5,856 |
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JAYHAWK
I assume that if the normal EKG indicates I am in arrhythmia the Kardia would indicate a false positive as well.
Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 05:14PM |
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Pixie
Could you explain a little why diminutive p waves happen.
Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 05:28PM |
Registered: 6 years ago Posts: 219 |
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Carey
A previous ablation would be the most common reason, and in my case that's exactly why. Your atria typically don't contract as forcefully after an ablation, and that produces smaller P waves. It can also simply be because you're using a Kardia or wearable device. Things that measure from your hand or arm have a hard time detecting P waves because they're naturally much lower voltage than the ventricular waves (QRS and T), so measuring from the hand instead of the chest means they're often totally undetectable because of the distance from the heart. This is why not seeing P waves on a Kardia, Apple Watch, etc. means almost nothing. Not seeing them on a 12-lead is much more meaningful.
I often see people say absence of P waves is diagnostic for afib, and that is not true. Afib is diagnosed by an irregularly irregular heart beat and missing P waves. But the P waves are kind of a distraction. If your pulse is irregularly irregular, that's diagnostic for afib. It's impossible to be in afib and have a regular heart beat, P waves or not.
Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 05:58PM |
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Re: P-Wave February 17, 2024 06:46PM |
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