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Left Anterior Fascicular Block Information

Left anterior fascicular block is a cardiac condition,[1][2] distinguished from left bundle branch block.

It is caused by only the anterior half of the bundle of His being defective. It is manifest on the ECG by left axis deviation.

It is much more common than left posterior fascicular block.

Contents

Characteristics

Normal activation of the left ventricle proceeds down the left bundle branch, which consist of two fascicles the left anterior fascicle and left posterior fascicle. Left Anterior Fascicular Block (LAFB), which is also known as Left Anterior Hemiblock (LAHB), occurs when a cardiac impulse spreads first through the left posterior fascicle, causing a delay in activation of the anterior and lateral walls of the left ventricle which are normally activated via the left anterior fascicle.

Although there is a delay or block in activation of the left anterior fascicle there is still preservation of initial left to right septal activation as well as preservation of the inferior activation of the left ventricle (preservation of septal Q waves in I and aVL and small initial R wave in leads II, III, and aVF). The delayed and unopposed activation of the remainder of the left ventricle now results in a shift in the QRS axis leftward and superiorly, causing marked left axis deviation. This delayed activation also results in a widening of the QRS complex, although not to the extent of a complete LBBB

Criteria for LAFB

left anterior fascicular block together with right bundle branch block is indicative of ischaemia

Exceptions

It is important not to call LAFB in the setting of a prior inferior wall myocardial infarction which may also demonstrate left axis deviation due to the initial forces (Q wave in a Qr complex) in leads II, III, and aVF. As opposed to LAHB, the left axis shift is due to terminal forces (i.e., the S wave in an rS complex) being directed superiorly,

Effects of LAFB on Diagnosing Infarctions and Left Ventricular Hypertrophy

LAHB may be a cause of poor R wave progression across the precordium causing a pseudoinfarction pattern mimicking an anteroseptal infarction. It also makes the electrocardiographic diagnosis of LVH more complicated, because both may cause a large R wave in lead aVL. Therefore to call LVH on an EKG in the setting of an LAHB you should see the presence of a “strain” pattern when you are relying on limb lead criteria to diagnose LVH.

Clinical Significance

References

  1. ^ Rebuzzi AG, Loperfido F, Biasucci LM (July 1985). "Transient Q waves followed by left anterior fascicular block during exercise". Br Heart J 54 (1): 107–9. doi:10.1136/hrt.54.1.107. PMID 4015909. PMC 481860. http://heart.bmj.com/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=4015909.
  2. ^ Chandrashekhar Y, Kalita HC, Anand IS (January 1991). "Left anterior fascicular block: an ischaemic response during treadmill testing". Br Heart J 65 (1): 51–2. doi:10.1136/hrt.65.1.51. PMID 1899584. PMC 1024464. http://heart.bmj.com/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=1899584.
  3. ^ Horwitz S, Lupi E, Hayes J, Frishman W, Cárdenas M, Killip T (September 1975). "Electrocardiographic criteria for the diagnosis of left anterior fascicular block. Left axis deviation and delayed intraventricular conduction". Chest 68 (3): 317–20. doi:10.1378/chest.68.3.317. PMID 1157535. http://www.chestjournal.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=1157535.
  4. ^ "Conduction Blocks 2006 KCUMB". http://courses.kcumb.edu/physio/blocks/index.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-20.

External links

Cardiovascular disease: heart disease · Circulatory system pathology (I00-I52, 390-429)
Ischaemic
CD/CHD CAD · Coronary thrombosis · Coronary vasospasm · Coronary artery aneurysm · Coronary artery dissection · Myocardial Bridge
Active ischemia Angina pectoris (Prinzmetal's angina, Stable angina) · Acute coronary (Unstable angina, Myocardial infarction / heart attack)
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Sinus bradycardia · Sick sinus syndrome

Heart block: Sinoatrial · AV (, , ) · Intraventricular (Bundle branch/Right/Left, Left anterior fascicular/Left posterior fascicular, Bifascicular/Trifascicular) · Adams-Stokes syndrome
Tachycardia (paroxysmal and sinus)
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Ventricular Torsades de pointes · Catecholaminergic polymorphic · Accelerated idioventricular rhythm
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Flutter/fibrillation Atrial flutter · Ventricular flutter · Atrial fibrillation (Familial) · Ventricular fibrillation
Pacemaker Wandering pacemaker · Ectopic pacemaker/Ectopic beat · Parasystole · Multifocal atrial tachycardia · Pacemaker syndrome
Long QT syndrome Romano-Ward syndrome · Andersen-Tawil syndrome · Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome
Cardiac arrest Sudden cardiac death · Asystole · Pulseless electrical activity · Sinoatrial arrest
Other/ungrouped hexaxial reference system (Right axis deviation, Left axis deviation) · QT (Short QT syndrome) · T (T wave alternans) · ST (Osborn wave, ST elevation, ST depression)
Cardiomegaly Ventricular hypertrophy (Left, Right/Cor pulmonale) · Atrial enlargement (Left, Right)
Other Cardiac fibrosis · Heart failure (Diastolic heart failure, Cardiac asthma) · Rheumatic fever

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Categories: Cardiac electrophysiology

 

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