the P wave
The EKG or ECG components are the P wave (contraction of the atria), the QRS complex (the contraction of the ventricles) and the T wave (repolarization of the ventricles).
< A myocardial infarction.
the ECG signal is traveling faster than the pressure recording wave.
damages or disease of the heart could cause changes of the path of depolarization (mean electrical axis). such affects would result in abnormalities in ECG trace. ultimately causing MEA to be off
Check into left atrial enlargement. usually a sign of notched P waves
P wave
The portion of the ECG that corresponds to atrial depolarization is called the P wave. The P wave is the first wave on the ECG.
The P wave.
depolarization of atrial muscle fibers
The atrial repolarization occurs during the QRS complex of the ECG but is obscured by the ventricle depolarization.
The P wave on ECG corresponds to electrical depolarization of the atria. It should be positive in lead II and negative in aVR when the P wave originates in the sinoatrial node.
Atrial depolarization occurs at the P wave. The atrial contraction occurs at the peak of the wave at the influx of calcium ions to prolong depolarization.
ECG records electrical activity and not mechanical, hence it has nothing to do with contraction. But P wave represents atrial depolarization.
The deflection waves in an ECG tracing include the P wave (atrial depolarization), QRS complex (ventricular depolarization), and T wave (ventricular repolarization). Each of these waves represents different electrical activity of the heart during a cardiac cycle.
P waves represent the atrial depolarization. QRS complex represent the ventricular depolarization. T waves represent the ventricular repolarization.
P, Q, R, S and T each represent a wave of the electrocardiogram (ECG). The waves, and the ECG in general, confer a graphic representation of the hearth's electric activity. The ECG of a healthy person usually contains three waves, called the P wave, the QRS complex and the T wave. The P wave corresponds to the electric depolarization of the auricles, the QRS complex corresponds to the electric depolarization of the ventricles and the repolarization of the auricles, and the T wave corresponds to the electric repolarization of the ventricles. A complete period of an ECG (that is, the P, QRS, and T waves) represents the electrical activity of the heart for one pulse.
An ECG trace typically shows a series of waveforms - P wave (atrial depolarization), QRS complex (ventricular depolarization), and T wave (ventricular repolarization) - on a graph with time plotted on the x-axis and voltage on the y-axis. The shape can vary depending on the heart's rhythm and any abnormalities present.