Electrical Alternans in ECG

Electrical Alternans in ECG


🔹 Electrical Alternans – Key Concept

  • Definition: Alternating amplitude or axis of the QRS complexes on ECG.
  • Mechanism: Heart “swings” within a large pericardial effusion, changing the orientation of the cardiac axis beat-to-beat.
  • ECG Finding: Every other QRS complex has a different height or direction.
  • Classical Association: Cardiac tamponade with massive pericardial effusion.
  • Types:
    • QRS alternans → most common
    • P-wave alternans
    • T-wave alternans (seen in severe arrhythmias, not just effusion)

🔹 Clinical Significance

  • Strong clue for pericardial tamponade.
  • Suggests swinging heart due to fluid overload.
  • Requires urgent management: pericardiocentesis.

FeatureDescription
DefinitionBeat-to-beat alternation in QRS amplitude/axis
ECG AppearanceTall–short–tall–short QRS complexes
MechanismHeart swings in large pericardial effusion
Classical AssociationCardiac tamponade
Other Alternans TypesP-wave, T-wave alternans
Clinical ImportanceSuggests large effusion → urgent pericardiocentesis

1. Electrical alternans is most classically associated with which condition?
A. Cardiac tamponade
B. Myocardial infarction
C. Atrial fibrillation
D. Pulmonary embolism
Electrical alternans is a hallmark of cardiac tamponade with large pericardial effusion.

2. On ECG, electrical alternans is defined as:
A. Beat-to-beat variation in QRS amplitude
B. Alternating QT interval length
C. Alternating PR interval length
D. Beat-to-beat T-wave inversion
Electrical alternans refers to alternating amplitude of QRS complexes.

3. What is the underlying mechanism of electrical alternans?
A. Ischemia-induced conduction block
B. Swinging motion of the heart in pericardial effusion
C. Intermittent AV block
D. Fluctuating serum potassium
The heart swings in the fluid-filled pericardial sac, causing QRS amplitude alternation.

4. Which type of alternans is considered most specific for cardiac tamponade?
A. QRS alternans
B. P-wave alternans
C. T-wave alternans
D. ST-segment alternans
QRS alternans is the classical finding in tamponade.

5. Electrical alternans is most commonly seen in:
A. Large pericardial effusion
B. Small pericardial effusion
C. Acute pericarditis without effusion
D. Left ventricular hypertrophy
It is most common in large effusions where the heart swings freely.

6. Electrical alternans may also be observed in:
A. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
B. Supraventricular tachycardia
C. Ventricular aneurysm
D. Mitral stenosis
Electrical alternans can rarely occur in SVT due to conduction abnormalities.

7. Which investigation confirms the presence of pericardial effusion in electrical alternans?
A. Chest X-ray
B. Echocardiography
C. Coronary angiography
D. CT head
Echocardiography is the gold standard for detecting pericardial effusion.

8. Electrical alternans is usually accompanied by:
A. Low-voltage QRS complexes
B. High-voltage QRS complexes
C. Prolonged QT interval
D. Delta waves
Low-voltage QRS complexes are often seen in large effusions.

9. Which clinical triad is typically associated with cardiac tamponade?
A. Beck’s triad
B. Charcot’s triad
C. Virchow’s triad
D. Leriche’s triad
Beck’s triad: hypotension, muffled heart sounds, jugular venous distension.

10. Electrical alternans in tamponade indicates:
A. Swinging heart due to massive effusion
B. Early stage pericarditis
C. Myocardial necrosis
D. Coronary vasospasm
It is a sign of a swinging heart within a large effusion.

11. Which wave can also show alternans in tamponade besides QRS?
A. U wave
B. Delta wave
C. P wave
D. Osborne wave
P-wave alternans can accompany QRS alternans in tamponade.

12. Which emergency procedure relieves tamponade with electrical alternans?
A. Thrombolysis
B. Pericardiocentesis
C. Coronary bypass
D. Pacemaker insertion
Pericardiocentesis is life-saving in tamponade.

13. Alternating QRS axis direction on ECG is called:
A. Electrical alternans
B. Axis deviation
C. Electrical storm
D. Conduction delay
Alternating QRS amplitude or axis is electrical alternans.

14. T-wave alternans is more commonly associated with:
A. Pericardial effusion
B. Mitral stenosis
C. Ventricular arrhythmias
D. Aortic regurgitation
T-wave alternans predicts susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death.

15. In tamponade, electrical alternans typically appears with:
A. Wide QRS tachycardia
B. Sinus tachycardia
C. Atrial fibrillation
D. Complete heart block
Most patients with tamponade present with sinus tachycardia and alternans.

16. Electrical alternans is usually absent in:
A. Cardiac tamponade
B. Large pericardial effusion
C. Small pericardial effusion
D. Malignant pericardial effusion
It is not seen in small effusions, only in large ones.

17. What does “swinging heart” refer to in tamponade?
A. Heart moving within pericardial fluid
B. Mitral valve prolapse
C. Atrial flutter waves
D. Septal shift
The heart swings freely within the effusion, causing alternans.

18. Which patient symptom is most suggestive of tamponade with alternans?
A. Dyspnea and hypotension
B. Chest wall tenderness
C. Orthopnea with pink sputum
D. Hemoptysis
Patients with tamponade present with dyspnea, hypotension, and shock features.

19. Which combination on ECG strongly suggests tamponade?
A. Low-voltage QRS + Electrical alternans
B. ST elevation + PR depression
C. Delta wave + Wide QRS
D. Tall peaked T waves
Low-voltage QRS + electrical alternans is highly suggestive of tamponade.

20. Immediate management of tamponade with electrical alternans is:
A. IV thrombolysis
B. Pericardiocentesis
C. High-dose steroids
D. Loop diuretics
Pericardiocentesis is the urgent treatment for tamponade with electrical alternans.

📊 Infographic – Quick Comparison

FeatureElectrical AlternansLow Voltage QRST-wave Alternans
DefinitionBeat-to-beat alternation in QRS amplitude/axisUniformly small QRS complexes (<5 mm limb, <10 mm chest)Beat-to-beat variation in T-wave amplitude/shape
MechanismSwinging heart in large pericardial effusionDampening of electrical forces by effusion, obesity, COPD, hypothyroidismRepolarization abnormality → electrical instability
ECG AppearanceAlternating tall–short QRS complexesConsistently low-voltage QRS in all leadsAlternating T-wave morphology
Classical AssociationCardiac tamponadePericardial effusion, COPD, obesity, myxedemaVentricular arrhythmia risk, sudden cardiac death
Clinical ImportanceStrong clue for tamponade → urgent pericardiocentesisSuggests underlying systemic/cardiac diseaseMarker of high arrhythmic risk (danger sign)

FeatureElectrical AlternansLow Voltage QRST-wave Alternans
DefinitionBeat-to-beat alternation in QRS amplitude/axisUniformly small QRS (<5 mm limb, <10 mm chest)Beat-to-beat variation in T-wave amplitude/shape
MechanismSwinging heart in large pericardial effusionElectrical dampening (effusion, obesity, COPD, hypothyroidism)Repolarization abnormality → electrical instability
ECG AppearanceAlternating tall–short QRS complexesConsistently low-voltage QRS in all leadsAlternating T-wave morphology
Classical AssociationCardiac tamponadePericardial effusion, COPD, obesity, myxedemaVentricular arrhythmia risk, sudden cardiac death
Clinical ImportanceStrong clue for tamponade → urgent pericardiocentesisSuggests systemic/cardiac diseaseMarker of high arrhythmic risk

Electrical Alternans vs Low Voltage QRS vs T-wave Alternans
High-yield, exam-ready comparison
Electrical Alternans
Low Voltage QRS
T-wave Alternans
Feature
Electrical Alternans
Low Voltage QRS
T-wave Alternans
Definition
Definition
QRS ↕ / Axis ↔ alternates
Beat-to-beat alternation in QRS amplitude and/or frontal plane axis.
Definition
Small QRS
Uniformly small QRS: <5 mm in limb leads or <10 mm in precordial leads.
Definition
T-wave ↕ alternates
Beat-to-beat variation in T-wave amplitude/morphology.
Mechanism
Mechanism
“Swinging heart” within large pericardial effusion changes cardiac axis each beat.
Mechanism
Electrical dampening: pericardial effusion, obesity, COPD, hypothyroidism, infiltrative disease.
Mechanism
Repolarization instability at microvolt level → substrate for ventricular arrhythmias.
ECG Appearance
ECG Appearance
Alternating tall–short QRS complexes; may also see P-wave alternans; often low voltage.
ECG Appearance
Consistently small QRS in most/all leads without alternating pattern.
ECG Appearance
Alternating T-wave amplitude/shape; can be visible or microvolt (signal-processed).
Classical Association
Classical Association
Cardiac tamponade with large pericardial effusion.
Classical Association
Pericardial effusion, obesity, COPD, myxedema, amyloid/infiltrative cardiomyopathy.
Classical Association
Ventricular arrhythmia risk; ischemia, cardiomyopathy, channelopathies.
Clinical Importance
Clinical Importance
High-specificity clue for tamponade → urgent pericardiocentesis if unstable.
Clinical Importance
Prompts evaluation for underlying systemic or structural causes.
Clinical Importance
Marker of electrical instability → risk stratify for malignant ventricular arrhythmias.
Memory hook: “Swinging heart → swinging QRS (Electrical Alternans)”. Low Voltage = “small everywhere.” T-wave Alternans = “repolarization risk.”
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