• Limb leads
  • Precordial leads: V1-V6
    • Leads V1-V6 are unipolar leads that give you a perspective of cardiac activation from the anterior side of the heart.
  • Left leads: I and aVL
  • Right leads: V1 and aVR
  • 📝 Under normal circumstances, the rhythm on the right and left leads will appear as mirror 🪞 images of one another.
    • ∴ if you see a tiny Q-wave in the left-sided leads, you can expect to see an R-wave in the right-sided leads.
    • ∴ if you see a big R-wave on the left-sided leads, you can expect to see an S-wave in the right-sided leads.
  • Normal activation
    • base → apex
    • endocardium → epicardium
    • In general, the left bundle is a thicker and a faster conducting structure (compared to the right bundle), so in a normal ventricle, you may expect to see tiny Q waves as the septum gets activated from left to right.
      • Most commonly seen normally in lateral leads (I, aVL, V5, V6)

Lead V1

  • V1 is located on the anterior part of the chest (and is a rightward lead)
    • can help localize the portion of the RVOT the VT is exiting from.
      • QS pattern is found in V1 → anterior RVOT wall origin
      • rS pattern is seen in V1 → posterior wall of the RVOT
  • V1 is located anterior to the RVOT as we are accustomed to seeing on PLAX view on Echo
  • Records how the depolarization is going in this direction, anterior to posterior.
  • If the terminal part in V1 is predominantly negative, then we call it as left bundle morphology.
    • As the left bundle is blocked, LV activation is delayed and the activation is going from anterior to posterior (i.e. away from lead V1, ∴ negative deflection).
  • If the terminal part of V1 is positive, we call it as right bundle branch morphology.