Luzza F, Oreto G
Cattedra di Malattie Cardiovascolari, Università di Messina, Italy.
Chest. 1994 May;105(5):1587-9. doi: 10.1378/chest.105.5.1587.
This report describes a patient manifesting with ventricular extrasystoles. The pause occasioned by extrasystoles often is followed by narrow QRS complexes not preceded by P waves, but at times is followed by a sinus P wave. At first glance, the pattern suggests a diagnosis of atrioventricular (A-V) junctional escape complexes. Analysis reveals that ventricular extrasystoles are, in fact, interpolated; the sinus P wave that follows the extrasystole is conducted to the ventricles with a very prolonged P-R interval (up to 0.80 s). The phenomenon is due to the presence of a dual A-V nodal pathway. The sinus impulse that follows the extrasystole is blocked in the fast pathway but may still be conducted to the ventricles through the slow pathway, resulting i a very prolonged P-R interval.