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Accelerated idioventricular rhythm
From WikEM
Contents
Background
- Results when rate of an ectopic ventricular pacemaker exceeds sinus node
- Usually benign,self limiting
- Terminology
- Idioventricular rhythm: 20-40 bpm
- Accelerated idoventricular rhythm: 40-120 bpm
- Ventricular tachycardia: >120 bpm
Causes
- Reperfusion phase of acute myocardial infarction (most common cause)
- Beta-sympathomimetics (isoprenaline or adrenaline)
- Drug toxicity, especially digoxin, cocaine and volatile anaesthetics such as desflurane
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Cardiomyopathy
- congenital heart disease
- myocarditis
- Return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) following cardiac arrest
- Athletic heart
Clinical Features
- Asymptomatic or palpitations
Differential Diagnosis
Palpitations
- Arrhythmias:
- Atrial fibrillation
- Grouped beats on ECG (commonly misdx as A-fib)
- Atrial bigeminy and trigeminy
- Mobitz I or Mobitz II
- Atrial flutter
- SVT
- Ventricular Tachycardia
- Sick sinus syndrome
- Multifocal atrial tachycardia
- PVCs
- Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome (WPW)
- Sinus node dysfunction
- AV Block
- Lown-Ganong-Levine Syndrome
- Accelerated idioventricular rhythm
- Non-arrhythmic cardiac causes:
- Cardiomyopathy
- CHF
- Mitral valve prolapse
- Congenital heart disease
- Pericarditis
- Valvular disease
- Pacemaker malfunction
- Acute MI
- Psychiatric causes:
- Drugs and Medications:
- Alcohol
- Caffeine
- Meds (i.e. digitalis, theophylline)
- Street drugs (i.e. cocaine)
- Tobacco
- Misc
Evaluation
ECG features
- Regular rhythm
- Rate 50-110 bpm
- Three or more ventricular complexes
- QRS complexes >120ms
- Fusion and capture beats
Management
- AIVR is a benign rhythm in most settings and does not usually require treatment
- Self limiting and resolves when sinus rate exceeds that of the ventricular foci
- Anti-arrhythmics may cause precipitous haemodynamic deterioration and should be avoided
- Treat the underlying cause: e.g. correct electrolytes, restore myocardial perfusion
- Patients with low-cardiac-output states (e.g. severe biventricular failure) may benefit from restoration of AV synchrony to restore atrial kick – in this case atropine may be trialled to increase sinus rate and AV conduction
Disposition
- Normally outpatient