ECG results..?
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The length of the peak (from top to bottom- if that's what you mean) isn't much of a concern when looking at the EKG. It just shows a picture of your electrical activity. Not everyone has the same QRS complex because not everyone has the same electrical activity. The peak above the line is the R, and the peak below the line is the S (the Q would be the first peak below the line before the R- but you don't indicate one here). When reading the EKG for abnormalities, the doctors are more concerned about the width. If the QRS complex measures more than 0.12 seconds, then that would be a bundle branch block which shows a slow conduction from the atrium to the ventricles. If it is below 0.12, then that is a normal measurement, and the doctors wouldn't be concerned.
I am onlly taking a wild guess out here because you really should have asked the doctor but to me it looks like your heart rate went down then started to go back up!
that doesnt indicate anything, i mean if its techniclly just like that, then its a widened qrs complex,but without the bundle branch block you would expect (that would show up like rabbit earts on the top) , really in the world of disrythmias you would be looking at the relationships, like the p-r interval, or even if they have p waves at all, the s-t segment and where that lies (elevated means current MI, saggy means previouse) ... but my official answer is unless you find a way to scan it in or something, all the boxes and the heights of the waves mean things. thats not a readable rhythm
It's a tad wide. That means that the signal is taking longer to go through your ventricles. It depends on what the rest of it looks like. If it's that alone, without a P wave, or a T wave, or then its a PVC.
a widened qrs complex.probably a right bundle branch block
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