All the Different Arrhythmias

All the Different Arrhythmias: The Heart’s Many Offbeat Grooves

Your heart’s electrical system is usually smooth and rhythmic—until it isn’t. Below, each arrhythmia gets its own quick-read section with what it is, how it looks on EKG, and why it matters.

Assorted ECG rhythm examples
SinusAtrialJunctionalAV BlockVentricularChannelopathies

1) Sinus Arrhythmia Usually benign

What it isRespiratory-linked rate variation—speeds with inspiration, slows with expiration.
EKGNormal P and QRS; slight beat-to-beat RR variability.
ClinicalCommon in healthy young people; no treatment needed.

2) Sinus Bradycardia

What it isSinus rate <60 bpm.
EKGP before each QRS; normal conduction but slow.
ClinicalNormal in athletes/sleep; symptomatic cases (fatigue, syncope) prompt evaluation of drugs, hypothyroidism, or sinus node disease.

3) Sinus Tachycardia

What it isSinus rate >100 bpm due to exercise, fever, anemia, sepsis, pain, hyperthyroidism, etc.
EKGNormal P/QRS at a faster rate.
ClinicalTreat the cause; inappropriate sinus tachycardia is a diagnosis of exclusion.

4) Premature Atrial Contractions (PACs) Usually benign

What it isEarly atrial beats outside the sinus node.
EKGEarly, differently shaped P wave ± non-compensatory pause; normal QRS.
ClinicalOften incidental; may herald atrial tachyarrhythmias in some patients.

5) Premature Ventricular Contractions (PVCs)

What it isEarly ventricular beats.
EKGWide, bizarre QRS not preceded by P; typically a compensatory pause.
ClinicalCommon; frequent or symptomatic PVCs warrant assessment for structural disease; consider burden-related cardiomyopathy if very frequent.

6) Atrial Fibrillation (AFib)

What it isChaotic atrial activity with loss of organized contraction.
EKGNo distinct P waves; irregularly irregular RR intervals.
Clinical↑ Stroke risk → assess CHA2DS2-VASc for anticoagulation; rate vs rhythm control; risk-factor management (sleep apnea, alcohol).

7) Atrial Flutter

What it isRapid macro-reentry in atria (often ~300 bpm).
EKG“Sawtooth” flutter waves; often 2:1 AV conduction (~150 bpm).
ClinicalAblation is frequently curative; stroke prevention parallels AFib strategy.

8) Supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT)

What it isParoxysmal narrow-complex tachycardia, often AVNRT/AVRT.
EKGRegular, narrow QRS >150 bpm; P waves hidden/retrograde.
ClinicalVagal maneuvers, adenosine for diagnosis/termination; ablation for recurrent episodes.

9) Ventricular Tachycardia (VT)

What it isFast ventricular rhythm (monomorphic or polymorphic).
EKGWide QRS tachycardia; AV dissociation/capture or fusion beats support VT over SVT with aberrancy.
ClinicalPotentially life-threatening; evaluate for ischemia/structural disease; ACLS protocols; ICD consideration if sustained or high risk.

10) Ventricular Fibrillation (VF)

What it isChaotic ventricular activation without output.
EKGIrregular, erratic waveform with no identifiable QRS.
ClinicalCardiac arrest—immediate defibrillation and ACLS.

11) First-Degree AV Block Usually benign

What it isDelayed AV node conduction.
EKGPR > 200 ms; all P conducted.
ClinicalOften incidental; monitor for symptoms or progression.

12) Second-Degree AV Block (Type I, Wenckebach)

What it isProgressive PR prolongation until a beat drops.
EKGLonger-longer-drop pattern.
ClinicalOften AV nodal and benign; observe unless symptomatic.

13) Second-Degree AV Block (Type II)

What it isIntermittent non-conducted P waves with constant PR in conducted beats.
EKGDropped QRS without preceding PR lengthening.
ClinicalInfranodal—higher risk of complete block; pacemaker usually indicated.

14) Third-Degree (Complete) Heart Block

What it isNo atrioventricular conduction.
EKGP–QRS dissociation; escape rhythm maintains rate.
ClinicalSevere bradycardia/syncope; pacemaker required.

15) Bundle Branch Blocks (RBBB/LBBB)

What it isDelay/block in right or left bundle.
EKGWide QRS; RBBB rsR′ in V1; LBBB broad/notched R in I, aVL, V5–V6.
ClinicalMay indicate structural heart disease (esp. LBBB) and alters ischemia interpretation.

16) Torsades de Pointes

What it isPolymorphic VT with “twisting” QRS around the baseline; associated with prolonged QT.
EKGIrregular, varying-amplitude wide complexes.
ClinicalEmergency: IV magnesium, correct electrolytes; stop QT-prolonging drugs; overdrive pacing if unstable.

17) Junctional Rhythm

What it isAV junction takes over pacemaking when sinus fails or conduction impaired.
EKGAbsent or inverted P, narrow QRS, regular rhythm.
ClinicalMay be benign or reflect sinus node disease/drug effect.

Brugada Syndrome SCD risk

What it isInherited sodium-channelopathy (often SCN5A) predisposing to malignant ventricular arrhythmias, often in structurally normal hearts.
EKGType 1 coved ST-segment elevation >2 mm in V1–V2 with negative T wave; pattern may be unmasked by fever or sodium-channel blockers.
ClinicalSyncope or nocturnal agonal respirations; manage fevers aggressively; avoid offending drugs; ICD for secondary prevention or high-risk profiles.

Long QT Syndrome (LQTS) Torsades risk

What it isCongenital or acquired repolarization disorder prolonging QTc.
EKGQTc prolonged for age/sex; T-wave morphology varies by genotype.
ClinicalSyncope with exertion/emotion/rest depending on genotype; avoid QT-prolonging drugs, correct electrolytes; beta-blockers first-line; ICD in high-risk.

Catecholaminergic Polymorphic VT (CPVT) Exertional syncope

What it isInherited calcium-handling disorder (e.g., RYR2) with adrenergically triggered bidirectional/polymorphic VT.
EKGNormal resting ECG; exercise or stress induces ventricular ectopy → bidirectional/polymorphic VT.
ClinicalBeta-blockers (non-selective), flecainide; ICD for survivors; strict trigger avoidance.

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) SCD in youth

What it isGenetic myocardial disease with LV hypertrophy and myofiber disarray.
EKGLVH patterns, deep narrow Q waves in inferolateral leads, repolarization changes.
ClinicalExertional syncope, dyspnea; risk-stratify for ICD; avoid dehydration and extreme exertion without evaluation.

Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy (ARVC)

What it isDesmosomal gene variants with fibrofatty RV replacement → VT/VF.
EKGT-wave inversions V1–V3; epsilon waves in some; ventricular arrhythmias of RV origin.
ClinicalExercise restriction; ICD for high risk; family screening.

Wolff–Parkinson–White (WPW) / Pre-excitation

What it isAccessory pathway enabling AV re-entry tachycardias; risk of AF with rapid conduction.
EKGShort PR, delta wave, wide QRS in sinus rhythm.
ClinicalConsider ablation; avoid AV-nodal blockers in AF with WPW; use pathway-blocking strategies.

How This Helps You

Recognizing rhythm patterns + symptoms guides urgency and next steps—when to seek emergency care (e.g., syncope with exertion, chest pain, severe palpitations), what tests your clinician might order (ECG, Holter/patch monitor, echo, stress test, electrolytes, thyroid labs), and how treatment choices are made (medications, ablation, devices, risk-factor control).

Educational only and not a substitute for clinical care. If you have concerning symptoms, seek medical evaluation.

Selected References

  • 2023–2024 AHA/ACC/HRS guidance on atrial fibrillation, ventricular arrhythmias, and sudden cardiac death.
  • NIH/NCBI Bookshelf & StatPearls chapters on ECG interpretation and arrhythmias.
  • UpToDate topic reviews for Brugada syndrome, LQTS, CPVT, HCM, and ARVC.