Advanced EKGs - Ventricular Tachycardia (Classification & Localization)

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How to classify VT based on duration, morphology, and mechanism. Also how to localize scar-based VT, as well as identify specific forms of idiopathic VT.

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#FOAMed #cardiology #ECG
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love that you keep making EKG videos ! Recently presented your explanation for right and left BBB morphology at Walter Reed Internal Medicine residency program. I always make sure to give your channel a shout out

Sponge
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Amazingly well-made video. I'm no EP, just your local street medic, but this was super easy to follow.

redactedname
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Very few comments for such interesting video! Thank you for the very clear and logically structured material.

lozserg
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Mister Erik, you are the best teacher all over the world !!! Thank you so much !

floramuradyan
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I enjoy very much cardiology so your videos are my "go to" for the ! Thank again for taking the time to explain ECGs!

lucolby
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Thank you for making these videos. They are very helpful. Talk about "light a thousand candles", just imagine how many patients you can help by educating clinical staff. Derek - RN

dmarcellus
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Love your explanations. Good summary of VT

tengyishao
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Thanks, you have such an exceptional knack to simplify an clarify complex topics, keep up the good job!!!@

henokbenti
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Just to be sure, you mispoke at 22:12 when you said that Papillary Muscle VT displayed inferior axis, right? Because I thought that inferior axis meant positive R waves in the inferior leads, whereas the ones shown seem to be negative. Going back, you also said that posteromedial papillary muscle VT's should have superior axis. Just checking. Thanks for all the work you put into this series!

FloridatedHO
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what a fantastic video - thank you so much for everything

aymansaeyeldin
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you are always an extraordinary teacher

abdullahmolda
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Very nice...easy way to interpretation of VT..thank you so much sir🙏🏻

sangeethas
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This lecture is amazing thank you sir!

doggyppants
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Doing a great job Dr Strong as always but i confess EKG is never an easy digestible topic to me

waelfadlallah
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Sir i am a real fan of your lectures ❤️❤️....pls keep uploading such informative videos....sir can you uplaod more videos on emergency medicine and toxicology topics??

ravipandey
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I was under the impression "slow vt"= accelerated idoventricular rhythm (AIVR) (also sometimes just called accelerated ventricular rhythm) and is 50-100bpm. The ekg you showed for slow vt would just be vtach as its over 100 and meets all the other criteria. The second ekg you said was AIVR is what's referred to as slow vt sometimes, and I agree with. Is that correct?

kevinbarnett
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Thanks for the incredible video especially localisation of VT (in fact, I searched online on this but mostly I got nothing or too much that mandates further EP knowledge. Also, textbooks weren't good with this either ). I once read in one book of K Wang that bidirectional VT in the context of digoxin toxicity is mostly not true VT, it's likely a junctional tachycardia that alternates RBB & LBB in a bigeminal fashion. Also, I once tried to get full tracings of pleomorphic VT but they are rare on Google, could you please tell me where you got this tracing from? Any other VT videos, more detailed SVT videos ? Thanks

wzoobqj
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HI, love your videos first of all!! Second, at first example, 14:26, you mentioned that the inferior leads were upright meaning an inferior axis location however, earlier in the video you mentioned that the upright inferior leads suggest Anterior and downward suggests inferior. Can you clarify?

kimberlymellick
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22:18 - superior axis would be right...

edvchess
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Is non pitting edema and lymphatic edema same disease?

atmoshperictemperatures