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AV block is a disturbance in conduction between the normal sinus impulse and the eventual ventricular response. The block is assigned to one of three classes, according to the severity of the conduction disturbance.
First-degree AV block is a simple prolongation of the PR interval but all P waves are conducted to the ventricle.
In second-degree AV block, some atrial impulses are not conducted into the ventricle.
In third-degree AV block (or complete heart block), none of the atrial impulses is conducted into the ventricle ( Fig. 17.1 ).
Description: There is a prolongation of the PR interval beyond the upper limits of normal (see Table 2.3) due to an abnormal delay in conduction through the AV node (see Fig. 17.1 ).
Causes
In otherwise healthy children and young adults, particularly athletes, mediated through excessive parasympathetic tone.
CHDs (such as endocardial cushion defect, ASD, Ebstein anomaly).
Other causes, including infectious disease, inflammatory conditions (rheumatic fever), cardiac surgery, and certain drugs (such as digitalis, calcium channel blockers).
Significance
Usually no hemodynamic disturbance results. Exercise, both recreational and during stress testing, induces parasympathetic withdrawal resulting in normalization of AV conduction and the PR interval.
Sometimes it may progress to a more advanced AV block.
Treatment: No treatment is indicated except in digitalis toxicity.
In second-degree AV block, some but not all P waves are followed by QRS complexes (dropped beats). There are three types: Mobitz type I (Wenckebach phenomenon), Mobitz type II, and high-grade (or advanced) second-degree AV block.
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