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normal ECG interpretation sinus rhythm QT interval QRS axis 12 lead

Here is a detailed analysis of this ECG report:

ECG Report Analysis - GOUTAM GIRI

Patient Information

  • Name: Goutam Giri
  • Sex: Male
  • Department: EMR
  • Date/Time: June 6, 2026, 07:22:14 PM
  • Institution: Spandan Hospital

Recorded Parameters

ParameterValueNormal RangeStatus
Heart Rate (HR)92 bpm60-100 bpmNormal
P wave86 ms80-100 msNormal
PR interval135 ms120-200 msNormal
QRS duration87 ms60-100 msNormal
QT/QTc (Bz)333/412 msQTc <440 ms (male)Normal
P/QRS/T axis52/6/5 degreesP: 0-75°, QRS: -30 to +90°Normal
RV5/SV10.786/0.597 mVSV1 + RV5/RV6 <3.5 mVNormal

Machine Diagnosis

Sinus Rhythm - Normal ECG (confirmed by Dr. RMO)

Lead-by-Lead Assessment

Limb Leads (I, II, III, aVR, aVL, aVF):
  • Upright P waves in I, II, aVF - consistent with normal sinus origin (SA node)
  • PR interval of 135 ms - within normal limits, no AV block
  • QRS axis of +6 degrees - normal axis (between -30° and +90°), no axis deviation
  • No significant ST segment changes visible
Precordial Leads (V1-V6):
  • Normal R-wave progression expected across V1-V6
  • RV5/SV1 values within normal limits - no evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH threshold: SV1 + RV5 >3.5 mV)
  • QTc of 412 ms is within the normal range for males (<440 ms)

Key Findings - What This ECG Shows

  1. Normal Sinus Rhythm - The heart's natural pacemaker (SA node) is functioning normally. Every P wave is followed by a QRS complex with a consistent PR interval.
  2. Heart Rate 92 bpm - Resting on the higher end of normal (60-100 bpm) but not tachycardic. This is clinically acceptable.
  3. Normal Conduction - PR 135 ms rules out first-degree AV block (which would be >200 ms). QRS 87 ms rules out bundle branch block (which would be >120 ms).
  4. Normal QTc (412 ms) - No prolonged QT, which means low risk for serious arrhythmias like Torsades de Pointes.
  5. No LVH - RV5 + SV1 well below the 3.5 mV threshold. No evidence of pressure overload on the left ventricle.
  6. Normal Axis - QRS axis of +6° is well within the normal range. No evidence of fascicular blocks, chamber enlargement, or axis shifts.

Summary

This is a completely normal 12-lead ECG for an adult male. There are no signs of:
  • Arrhythmia
  • Conduction block
  • Myocardial ischemia or infarction
  • Ventricular hypertrophy
  • QT prolongation
  • Axis deviation
The report has been confirmed as "Normal ECG" by the attending physician (Dr. RMO) at Spandan Hospital. No immediate cardiac concern is identified from this tracing.

Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational purposes only and is based on the printed parameters and machine interpretation visible in the image. A formal ECG interpretation must always be performed by a qualified physician who has reviewed the original tracing in a clinical context.
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