Ventricular Complex Aberrant

Aberrant gastric complex is a heart rhythm disorder that is associated with an abnormality in the functioning of the myocardium. This condition can be caused by a variety of reasons, including heart disease, pacemakers, and other medical devices.

There are several types of ventricular aberration. One of the most common is a right bundle branch block.



Ventricular deviation, aberrant ventricular junction (AV block) is a type of arrhythmia in which there is a disruption in the sequential conduction of signals between the sinus node and the ventricle of the heart itself, which leads to a delay or even cessation of the arrival of ventricular contractions, as well as a prolongation of the QRS interval of the ECG.

According to experts, ventricular deviation is most often recorded in people over 50 years of age and is associated with arterial hypertension, heart failure, myocardial ischemia, cardiomyopathy, degenerative diseases of peripheral vessels and increased load on the heart muscle. Sometimes a predisposing factor may be the use of certain medications. Also, in some cases, due to insufficient ejection fraction of blood from the ventricle of the heart against the background of organic heart damage, it is determined only independently on an ECG, but is not accompanied by symptoms and clinical manifestations.

Abnormal ventricular activation is often asymptomatic. Among rare manifestations, symptoms of AV block may include palpitations, heaviness in the chest, dizziness and lightheadedness. It is undesirable to regard the most common sinus bradycardia with a pause interval of 2.5 to 4.0 seconds as a symptom of abnormal impulse conduction in the AV canal of the heart. This condition is physiological and is not a pathology if it is caused by normal tone of the vagus nerve. Regular blocking of the AV node after pauses in its work due to changes in heart rate should not be mistaken for intermittent AV block, since the AV node ensures normal conduction of the impulse; This type of block is usually not life-threatening and probably resolves, and blood flow to the heart increases dramatically, resulting in an increase in the duration of ventricular filling and the QRS interval.

_If_ the patient _records_ the frequency of contractions _