An atrioventricular (AV) nodal block is a conduction disorder that is characterized by an interruption between the sinoatrial node and atrioventricular node (PR interval), resulting in an elongation of the PR interval (> 0.2 sec).
It is congenital in some patients. In others, it is usually caused by ischemia (post-MI or due to chronic Coronary Artery Disease). The best initial treatment in stable patients with AV block is to discontinue the medications that may block the AV block or administer an antidote to the medication.
AV nodal blocks
| AV Block | Description | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| First-degree AV block | Isolated prolonged PR interval. Can be congenital, and patients generally don’t have symptoms. | None required |
| Second-degree, Mobitz Type I | Progressive PR elongation and regularly dropped beats | No required, IV atropine if symptoms are present |
| Second-degree, Mobitz Type II | Normal PR interval and dropped beats | Internal pacing |
| Third-degree AV blocks | There is no correlation between the P wave and QRS complex (complete block). Patients have symptoms of hypoperfusion. | Internal pacing |
- Causes
- Coronary artery disease
- Myocardial Infarction
- Medications (ABCD)
- Adenosine
- Beta blockers
- Calcium channel blockers (non-dihydropyridine)
- Digoxin
- Signs and symptoms
- Dizziness
- Syncope
- Disorientation
- Lightheadedness
- HR < 60 bpm
- Hypotension
- May appear distressed
- Irregular rate/rhythm in patients with second or third-degree blocks
- Regularly irregular heart rate = Mobitz II (Wenckebach)
- Investigations
- Treatment
- Unstable patient
- Atropine for Mobitz I
- Transcutaneous or internal pacing for Mobitz II or third-degree
- Stable patient
- Stop medications
- Administer antidote
- Glucagon for Beta-Blocker
- Calcium Chloride for Calcium channel blockers
- Digoxin Immune Fab for Digoxin
- Indications for a pacemaker
- AV block with persistent or severe symptoms
- Mobitz II or Third degree block in the absence of a reversible cause
- Unstable patient
