Premature junctional contraction

Premature junctional contractions (PJCs), also called atrioventricular junctional premature complexes or junctional extrasystole, are premature cardiac electrical impulses originating from the atrioventricular node of the heart or "junction." This area is not the normal but only a secondary source of cardiac electrical impulse formation. These premature beats can be found occasionally in healthy people and more commonly in some pathologic conditions, typically in the case of drug cardiotoxicity, electrolyte imbalance, mitral valve surgery, and cold water immersion.[1] If more than two such beats are seen, then the condition is termed junctional rhythm. On the surface ECG, premature junctional contractions will appear as a normally shaped ventricular complex or QRS complex, not preceded by any atrial complex or P wave or preceded by an abnormal P wave with a shorter distance or interval between the P wave and the QRS. Rarely, the abnormal P wave can follow the QRS.[2]

See also

References

  1. Tipton MJ, Kelleher PC, Golden FS Institute of Naval Medicine, Gosport, Hants, UK. Undersea & Hyperbaric Medicine : Journal of the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc [1994, 21(3):305-313]
  2. "An introduction to clinical electrocardiography - Supraventricular Arrhythmias". ECG Learning Center. University of Utah.


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