Dear Dr. Roach: I recently was diagnosed with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. I have seen two cardiologists, and while I feel they have done what they think is right, I believe that because we have ...
This WPW ECG shows the typical "pseudoinfarction" pattern with large inferior Q waves present. When WPW is seen on an ECG, all chamber hypertrophies, enlargements and determinations of ischemia ...
The diagnosis is normal sinus rhythm, WPW pattern, PACs in bigeminal pattern, and pseudo inferior wall infarction. The rhythm is irregular and there is a pattern of group beating (ie, two QRS ...
The prevalence of Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome is about 1–3 per 1000.2 In the syndrome, some ventricular depolarization occurs via a rapidly conducting accessory pathway. This results in a short PR ...