attachment

Conclusion of this ECG

Reading File
Now let me carefully analyze the ECG image provided.
Looking at the ECG strip closely:
Technical Details (from the printout):
  • Date: 21-04-2026, Time: 16:28:41
  • Speed: 25 mm/s, Amplitude: 10 mm/mV
  • Heart Rate: ♥63 bpm
  • Patient: ~35 years old, male
  • Filter: 0.5–100 Hz, ПТ50
Lead-by-lead Analysis:
Rhythm:
  • Rate: ~63 bpm — normal sinus rhythm
  • Rhythm appears regular
Frontal Leads (I, II, III, aVR, aVL, aVF):
  • Lead I: Small positive deflection, relatively low amplitude
  • Lead II: Relatively flat/low amplitude complexes
  • Lead III: Negative deflections visible
  • aVF: Negative/isoelectric deflections
Precordial Leads (V1–V6):
  • V1–V2: Small QRS complexes, possible rS pattern
  • V3: Transitional zone
  • V4–V5: Tall R waves with prominent amplitude — notably very tall R waves in V4-V5
  • V6: Tall R waves
Key Findings:
  1. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH) — The tall R waves in V4–V5 and the overall QRS amplitude pattern strongly suggest LVH. In a 35-year-old male, this is a significant finding.
  2. Axis: The pattern in leads I/II/III suggests a normal or leftward axis.
  3. ST-T changes: The image resolution makes it difficult to definitively assess ST segments, but the tall R waves with possible ST depression/T-wave inversion in left lateral leads would support LVH with strain pattern.
  4. No overt delta waves (no pre-excitation pattern visible)
  5. No obvious LBBB/RBBB pattern
  6. P waves: Appear present before each QRS, consistent with sinus rhythm

ECG Conclusion

ParameterFinding
RhythmNormal sinus rhythm
Heart Rate63 bpm (normocardic)
Electrical AxisNormal / mild left axis deviation
P waveNormal
QRSWidened amplitude; tall R waves in V4–V5
ST-TPossible repolarization changes in lateral leads
OverallLeft Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH) pattern

Interpretation:
Sinus rhythm, heart rate 63 bpm. Signs of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH). The tall R wave amplitude in precordial leads V4–V5 meets voltage criteria for LVH (likely Sokolow-Lyon criteria: SV1 + RV5 or RV6 ≥ 35 mm). In the clinical context of a 35-year-old inpatient with fever (temperature chart visible, reaching ~38–39°C), LVH may indicate:
  • Hypertensive heart disease (most common cause)
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
  • Athletic heart (if athlete)
Recommendation: Correlate with blood pressure measurements (visible on the temperature chart — BP columns present), echocardiography, and clinical history to determine the underlying etiology of LVH.
⚠️ This is an AI-assisted ECG interpretation for educational/reference purposes. Final clinical interpretation must be made by a qualified physician.
This is a shared conversation. Sign in to Orris to start your own chat.