This is
from a pt with NICM, s/p cardiac transplant.
If you look at long lead II, some of
you might call this wandering atrial pacemaker or WAP because you are seeing
variable P wave morphology. However, in the "real" WAP, the change in
the P wave is gradual. The popular WAP which is described by most books as a
pattern with at least 3 different P wave morphology should properly be called
multifocal atrial rhythm or multifocal atrial tachycardia depending on the rate
( ≤100 or >
100 bpm, respectively). In this case, there are 2 P waves with the dominant P
wave (red arrows) with a rate of ~88 bpm with small +/bigger - component. The
second P wave (black arrows) has a rate
of ~50 bpm with a dominant + component. Sometimes there is fusion of the P
waves (F) which creates confusion. Thus, this strip is showing ATRIAL DISSOCIATION IN A PATIENT S/P
CARDIAC TRANSPLANT.
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