Ectopic pacemaker
An ectopic pacemaker, also known as ectopic focus or ectopic foci, is a group of excitable cells that causes a premature heart beat known as an ectopic beat, outside the normally functioning SA node of the heart. It is thus a cardiac pacemaker that is ectopic, producing an ectopic beat. Acute occurrence is usually non-life-threatening, but chronic occurrence can progress into tachycardia, bradycardia or ventricular fibrillation. In a normal heart beat rhythm, the SA node usually suppresses the ectopic pacemaker activity due to the higher impulse rate of the SA node. However, in the instance of either a malfunctioning SA node or an ectopic focus bearing an intrinsic rate superior to SA node rate, ectopic pacemaker activity may take over the natural heart rhythm. This phenomenon is called an escape rhythm, the lower rhythm having escaped from the dominance of the upper rhythm. As a rule, premature ectopic beats indicate increased myocyte or conducting tissue excitability, whereas late ectopic beats indicate proximal pacemaker or conduction failure with an escape 'ectopic' beat.
Signs and symptoms
- Isolated ectopic beats frequently cause no symptoms, although the most common symptom is the perception of a 'missed beat'. This occurs because the person notices the prolonged gap between the early beat and the next normal beat.
- Palpitations
- Feeling faint
Cause
- Increased local parasympathetic nervous system activity
- Elevated sympathetic nervous system output
- Overstimulation from drugs such as caffeine, digitalis, and catecholamines
- Cardiac Ischemia – the membranes of apoptotic cells become "leaky" and cause surrounding tissue to become hyperkalemic or hypercalcemic, causing random excitation.
- Infection
- Disease, such as sinus venosus and atrial defects
- Sinus node dysfunction which can cause the rate of impulse to slow
- SA node blockage so that impulses never leave the atria
- AV node blockage prevents normal conduction across ventricles
Physiology
Diagnosis
On an ECG, the QRS complex will be abnormally shaped when looking at ventricular ectopic activity, often it occurs earlier with an absent P wave. It can be perceived as a skipped beat on both the ECG and through normal pulse-taking.During atrial ectopic activity where the P wave is normally rounded can be inverted or peaked. However the QRS complex and T waves appear relatively normal.
Conversely, during junctional ectopic activity the P wave is frequently absent or can be hidden in the QRS complex.