A woman with near-syncope, bradycardia, and hypotension

 Written by Pendell MeyersA 59-year-old woman with diabetes, hypertension, prior stroke, and peripheral vascular disease presented with multiple near-syncopal events over the past 2 days, as well as ongoing back pain. EMS found her bradycardic in the 40s and administered atropine with no response. She was mentating and had a reasonable blood pressure (around 90s systolic), so they decided not to pace prehospital. On arrival the patients blood pressure was 79/50 mm Hg. She was still awake and alert. Here is her first ECG (no baseline available):What do you think?Findings: - junctional bradycardia (no P waves, slow regular QRS rhythm, QRS is slightly wide [computer 119ms] but not wide or disorganized enough to be ventricular in origin) - widened QRS (as above, must assume QRS widening is new until proven otherwise) - QRS with LAFB morphology - Peaked T waves in V2-V5Interpretation:Diagnostic of severe hyperkalemia. No evidence of inferior OMI (which should always be scrutinized for to explain sick bradycardia, because the RCA usually supplies the SA and AV nodes).The provider read this as a junctional bradycardia. There was no initial recognition of hyperkalemia. Dopamine was started as well as a fluid bolus, yet the heart rate was still in the high 30s. Cardiology was called emergently for advice as to whether they should start pacing.The labs returned in time to show a potassium level of 7.1 mEq/L before pacing was performed.She received calcium,...
Source: Dr. Smith's ECG Blog - Category: Cardiology Authors: Source Type: blogs