character of palpitations
Last reviewed 01/2018
Ask the patient about:
- the rate of the palpitations (fast or slow)
- the regularity
- are the palapitations felt only in the chest (neck-) or are they felt in the neck as well (neck+)
The suspected diagnoses will be as follows:
- rapid, regular, neck+
- atrioventricular nodal tachycardia
- rapid, regular, neck-
- circus movement tachycardia via accessory pathway
- atrial tachycardia
- ventricular tachycardia
- circus movement tachycardia via accessory pathway
- rapid, irregular
- atrial fibrillation
- atrial flutter
- atrial tachycardia
- slow, irregular, neck+
- ventricular premature beats
- slow, irregular, neck-
- any premature beat
(Palpitations are felt in the neck if the atria contract against closed atrioventricular valves).
- a feeling of 'flip-flopping' in the chest is usually secondary to a premature atrial or ventricular contraction
- sensation that the heart has stopped is secondary to the pause (compensatory or noncompensatory) that follows a prematture beat, whereas pounding is often the manifestation of a forceful beat caused by postextrasystolic potentiation after a premature beat
- feeling of rapid flutterng in the chest is usually secondary to supraventricular or ventricular tachyarrhythmias
Notes:
- pounding feeling in the neck is caused by the dissociation of atrial and
ventricular contractions so that the atria contract against closed tricuspid
and mitral valves, producing cannon A waves
- cannon A waves are perceived as neck pulsations and, when rapid and
regular, may be seen as a bulging in the neck (sometimes termed a 'frog
sign')
- sensation of rapid and regular pounding in the neck is most typical
of reentrant supraventricular arrhythmias, particularly atrioventricular
nodal tachycardia
- patients with neck palpitations may have atrioventricular nodal tachycardia caused by simultaneous contraction of the atria and ventricles, which causes reflux of blood in the superior vena cava
- atrioventricular nodal tachycardia is the most common form of
paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia
- three times as common in women as in men
- in the typical form of atrioventricular nodal tachycardia, the atria and ventricles are activated simultaneously at an average rate of 160 to 180 beats per minute
- sensation of rapid and regular pounding in the neck is most typical
of reentrant supraventricular arrhythmias, particularly atrioventricular
nodal tachycardia
- atrioventricular dissociation can also result from ventricular premature
contractions called ventricular premature depolarizations
- premature ventricular contractions also cause atrioventricular dissociation, resulting in pounding sensations in the neck and often a physical finding of cannon waves
- in these cases only one or a few pounding sensations are felt in the neck, and the rhythm is often more irregular and less sustained than with atrioventricular nodal tachycardia
- palpitations caused by ventricular premature depolarizations with cannon A waves are also often described as a feeling of being unable to catch one's breath
- cannon A waves are perceived as neck pulsations and, when rapid and
regular, may be seen as a bulging in the neck (sometimes termed a 'frog
sign')
Reference:
- Zimetbaum PZ, Jospephson ME. Evaluation of Patient with Palpitations. NEJM 1998; 338 (19): 1369-1373.
- Yalamanchili M et al. Evaluation of Palpitations: Etiology and Diagnostic Methods. Hosp Physician 2003:53-58.