Diagnostic criteria for left atrial abnormality and right atrial abnormality

Diagnostic criteria for left atrial abnormality and right atrial abnormality — based on ECG findings

Diagnostic criteria for left atrial abnormality (LAA) and right atrial abnormality (RAA) — mostly based on ECG findings, since that’s the classic framework.


Left Atrial Abnormality (LAA)

(reflects LA enlargement or delayed conduction through LA)

ECG Criteria

  • P wave in lead II
    • Broad, notched (“P mitrale”)
    • Duration >120 ms (0.12 s)
    • Notch between the two peaks ≥40 ms
  • P wave in lead V1
    • Biphasic P wave with terminal negative portion ≥1 mm deep and ≥40 ms wide
    • Negative component area >40 ms·mm (Morris index)
  • Axis: May be leftward.
  • Other: Often seen in mitral valve disease, LV diastolic dysfunction, hypertension.

Right Atrial Abnormality (RAA)

(reflects RA enlargement or hypertrophy)

ECG Criteria

  • P wave in lead II
    • Tall, peaked “P pulmonale”
    • Height >2.5 mm in inferior leads (II, III, aVF)
  • P wave in lead V1
    • Tall initial positive component (>1.5 mm)
  • Other leads: P wave >1.5 mm in V1–V2 may support diagnosis.
  • Axis: Rightward P wave axis (>75°) possible.
  • Common causes: Pulmonary hypertension, tricuspid stenosis/regurgitation, congenital heart disease.

Quick Comparative Table

FeatureLeft Atrial Abnormality (LAA)Right Atrial Abnormality (RAA)
P wave morphologyBroad, notched (“P mitrale”)Tall, peaked (“P pulmonale”)
Lead IIDuration >120 ms, notchedHeight >2.5 mm
Lead V1Wide/deep terminal negative part (≥1 mm, ≥40 ms)Tall initial positive part (>1.5 mm)
AxisMay shift leftwardMay shift rightward
Common causesMitral stenosis, HTN, LV diastolic dysfunctionPulmonary HTN, tricuspid disease, congenital shunts

1. Which ECG feature is most characteristic of Left Atrial Abnormality (LAA)?
A) Broad, notched P wave in lead II
B) Peaked P wave in lead II
C) Short PR interval
D) Delta wave
Broad, notched P wave in lead II (“P mitrale”) is typical of LAA.
2. A biphasic P wave in V1 with a deep, wide terminal negative portion suggests:
A) Right atrial abnormality
B) Left atrial abnormality
C) Ventricular preexcitation
D) Normal finding
LAA produces a broad terminal negative deflection of the P wave in V1.
3. Right Atrial Abnormality (RAA) is best indicated by:
A) Notched P wave in II
B) Tall, peaked P wave in II (>2.5 mm)
C) PR prolongation
D) Widened QRS
RAA manifests as “P pulmonale” – tall, peaked P waves in inferior leads.
4. Which P wave feature in V1 supports RAA?
A) Tall initial positive deflection (>1.5 mm)
B) Wide negative terminal deflection
C) P wave inversion
D) PR depression
RAA produces a tall, initial positive component of the biphasic P wave in V1.
5. LAA is commonly associated with which valvular lesion?
A) Mitral stenosis
B) Aortic stenosis
C) Pulmonic stenosis
D) Tricuspid regurgitation
Mitral stenosis leads to chronic LA pressure overload → LAA.
6. P pulmonale is most often caused by:
A) Hypertension
B) Pulmonary hypertension
C) Aortic regurgitation
D) Mitral regurgitation
Pulmonary hypertension → RA pressure overload → P pulmonale.
7. Duration of P wave >120 ms in lead II indicates:
A) Left atrial abnormality
B) Right atrial abnormality
C) AV block
D) Sinus arrhythmia
Prolonged P wave duration suggests delayed LA activation (LAA).
8. A notched P wave in lead II is classically called:
A) P mitrale
B) P pulmonale
C) P terminale
D) Delta P
Broad, notched P wave in lead II is termed “P mitrale”.
9. Which condition does NOT typically cause RAA?
A) Pulmonary hypertension
B) Tricuspid stenosis
C) Congenital heart disease
D) Mitral stenosis
Mitral stenosis is more associated with LAA, not RAA.
10. Morris index refers to:
A) PR interval calculation
B) Area of terminal negative P wave in V1
C) P wave amplitude in II
D) QRS axis
Morris index = area of terminal negative P wave in V1; >40 ms·mm indicates LAA.
11. Which P wave height in inferior leads supports RAA?
A) >2.5 mm
B) >1 mm
C) >3.5 mm
D) >0.5 mm
RAA: P pulmonale is defined as P wave height >2.5 mm in II, III, aVF.
12. Which atrial abnormality often coexists with systemic hypertension?
A) Left atrial abnormality
B) Right atrial abnormality
C) Both equally
D) Neither
Systemic hypertension → LV diastolic dysfunction → LAA.
13. Which atrial abnormality is more likely in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)?
A) Left atrial abnormality
B) Right atrial abnormality
C) Both
D) Neither
COPD → pulmonary hypertension → RAA (P pulmonale).
14. A tall initial P deflection in V1 is termed:
A) P mitrale
B) P pulmonale
C) P terminale
D) Delta P
P pulmonale = tall P waves from RAA.
15. The classic “double-humped” P wave in II suggests:
A) Left atrial abnormality
B) Right atrial abnormality
C) AV nodal reentry
D) WPW syndrome
Double-humped/notched P wave = P mitrale = LAA.
16. A P wave with tall amplitude and narrow base is typical of:
A) LAA
B) RAA
C) Normal sinus P
D) LVH
RAA produces tall, peaked P wave (P pulmonale).
17. Which ECG feature differentiates LAA from RAA?
A) Axis deviation
B) Duration vs amplitude changes
C) QRS width
D) QT interval
LAA = prolonged P duration; RAA = increased P amplitude.
18. Which condition may cause biatrial abnormality (both LA and RA changes)?
A) Isolated aortic stenosis
B) Combined mitral and tricuspid valve disease
C) Ventricular septal defect
D) Normal variant
Mixed mitral + tricuspid disease → enlargement of both atria.
19. The terminal negative P component in V1 ≥40 ms wide and ≥1 mm deep suggests:
A) Left atrial abnormality
B) Right atrial abnormality
C) Junctional rhythm
D) AV block
Terminal negative deflection in V1 = hallmark of LAA.
20. Which atrial abnormality shows P wave axis deviation to the right (>75°)?
A) LAA
B) RAA
C) Both
D) Neither
RAA can shift P axis rightward, reflecting RA dominance.

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