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Report analysis

Reading File
analyse_media
Here is a complete analysis of the ECG report:

ECG Report Analysis

Patient Details

FieldValue
NameK. Kishor
Age / Gender32 years / Male
Date & Time10-06-2020, 11:21 AM

Technical Settings

  • Paper speed: 25 mm/s | Gain: 10 mm/mV
  • Filters: 0.67-25 Hz, AC50 (50 Hz interference filter active)
  • Format: 4×2.5s (standard 12-lead layout)

Automated Measurements

ParameterValueNormal RangeStatus
Heart Rate78 bpm60-100 bpmNormal
P wave duration98 ms<120 msNormal
PR interval135 ms120-200 msNormal
QRS duration82 ms<100 msNormal
QT interval339 ms-Normal
QTc (Bazett)388 ms<440 ms (male)Normal
P axis46°0-75°Normal
QRS axis27°-30° to +90°Normal
T axis13°-Normal
RV5 amplitude0.642 mV-Normal (no LVH)
SV1 amplitude0.533 mV-Normal (no LVH)

Lead-by-Lead Interpretation

Rhythm: Regular rhythm with a P wave preceding every QRS complex. P waves are upright in leads I, II, III, and aVF, and inverted in aVR - confirming a normal sinus node origin.
Axis: QRS axis at 27° is normal (no left or right axis deviation).
P Waves: Normal morphology and duration. No features of left or right atrial enlargement (no broad notched P in II, no tall peaked P).
PR Interval: Normal at 135 ms - no first-degree AV block, no pre-excitation (no delta waves).
QRS Complex: Normal at 82 ms - no bundle branch block (LBBB or RBBB would require QRS >120 ms). No pathological Q waves to suggest prior myocardial infarction.
ST Segments & T Waves: No ST elevation or depression is noted. No T wave inversions. No features of ischemia or injury.
QTc: 388 ms is well within normal limits for a male (<440 ms). No risk of QT prolongation or torsades de pointes.
Voltage: RV5 + SV1 = 1.175 mV, well below the Sokolow-Lyon threshold of 3.5 mV. No left ventricular hypertrophy.

Machine Diagnosis

Sinus Rhythm - Normal ECG (confirmed)

Summary

This is a completely normal 12-lead ECG in a 32-year-old male. All intervals, axes, wave morphologies, and voltages are within normal limits. There are no features of:
  • Arrhythmia
  • Conduction abnormality (AV block, bundle branch block)
  • Myocardial ischemia or infarction
  • Chamber hypertrophy or enlargement
  • QT prolongation
No further cardiac workup is indicated based on this ECG alone. Clinical correlation with the patient's symptoms and history is always recommended.
Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not replace a physician's clinical interpretation. All ECG reports should be formally reviewed by a qualified medical professional.
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