Please find the attached ECG Graph and evaluate for same . How's the report revealed and what is the condition of heart .
NB - I have done this without doctor recommendation due to my anxiety and palpitation.
Answers (20)
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Do the following
1. Blood tests- CBP, TSH, KFT, Calcium and Magnesium levels
2. Holter ECG for 48hrs
Reason to suggest these is your symptoms and a short PR interval on your ECG
All the best.
J G S R clinic
Your ECG strip shows normal sinus rhythm with the following key features:
• Heart rate: ~80 bpm (normal)
• Rhythm: Sinus rhythm (confirmed in report)
• PR interval: Normal (short PR noted in report, but value ~120–140 ms appears within normal range, not pathological short PR syndrome)
• QRS duration: Normal (narrow QRS complexes)
• QT/QTc: Normal (no prolongation visible)
• Axis: Normal
• No significant ST elevation, depression, T-wave inversion, or pathological Q waves visible in the leads shown
• No arrhythmias (no PVCs, PACs, atrial fibrillation, or blocks apparent in the strip)
Overall impression: Normal ECG with no evidence of acute ischemia, infarction, significant conduction defect, or dangerous arrhythmia. The “short PR interval” comment in the report is likely a descriptive note but not clinically significant here (short PR
Next Steps
1. This ECG is reassuring — you do not need to panic or rush to emergency based on this report.
2. Still see a cardiologist / physician within 1–2 weeks (not emergency) because:
• You have ongoing palpitations + anxiety
• One normal ECG does not rule out intermittent arrhythmias (e.g., PVCs, SVT, inappropriate sinus tachycardia)
• Recommended tests to completely reassure you:
• 24–48 hour Holter monitor (captures heart rhythm during daily life + during palpitations)
• 2D Echocardiography (checks heart structure/valves/function — very useful for anxiety)
• Thyroid function (TSH + free T4) — hyperthyroidism can cause palpitations
• Electrolytes (K, Mg, Ca) — low levels can trigger palpitations
3. Go to ER / hospital same day only if:
• Palpitations become very fast (>150 bpm) and sustained
• Chest pain with palpitations
• Dizziness → near-fainting
• Shortness of breath or severe weakness
Health Tips
• For anxiety & palpitations right now (safe to try):
• Practice 4-7-8 breathing (inhale 4 sec, hold 7 sec, exhale 8 sec) × 5 cycles when palpitations start — works very well for most people
• Avoid caffeine, energy drinks, strong tea after 2 pm
• Sleep 7–8 hours, fixed timing
• Limit screen time 1 hour before bed
• Gentle walk 20–30 min daily — helps regulate heart rate
• Do not keep doing repeated ECGs on your own — it increases anxiety and rarely adds new information if previous ones are normal.
• Keep a simple diary: time of palpitations, duration, what you were doing/feeling — very helpful for doctor/Holter correlation.
Your heart is most likely perfectly normal — the symptoms are almost certainly from anxiety + heightened awareness (very common in young adults who check ECGs repeatedly).
A Holter monitor + echo will give you 99% peace of mind.
Please see a cardiologist soon (show this ECG + your symptoms) — once they confirm normal, the worry usually drops dramatically.
If you want help preparing questions for the doctor or if palpitations change (frequency, duration), feel free to consult online.
Take care — stay calm, you are okay
Ecg is normal
Get Haemoglobin and thyroid function tests done and shareresultswith me..
Palpitations seem to be due to anxiety.
Try to stay stress free, follow a healthy life style.
ECG is normal, please manage your anxiety, due to anxiety heart rate is increased and varies in reports.heart is in well condition no abnormalities is found.so please controll your unnecessary anxiety.
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine one one nine two five five six nine nine for a detailed free discussion
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
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