Skip to content

Q wave

SHARE VIA:

Normal Q waves are narrow (average 0.02 seconds and less than 0.03 seconds), are usually less than 5mm deep in left precordial leads and aVF but may be as deep as 8mm in lead 3 in children younger than 3 years.

Q waves are abnormal if they:

  • Appear in the right precordial leads i.e. V1 (e.g. severe RVH)
  • Are absent in the left precordial leads (LBBB)
  • Are abnormally deep (ventricular hypertrophy of the volume overload type)
  • Are abnormally deep and wide (myocardial infarction or fibrosis)

KEEP READING

CARE study HEADER

Children’s Anti-inflammatory Reliever (CARE) Study: Can children with mild asthma ditch their blue inhaler?

Copy of Trial (1)

The 99th Bubblewrap x Sheffield Children’s ED

Atypical genitalia HEADER

Approach to the neonate with atypical genitalia

Eczema Herpeticum HEADER

Eczema Herpeticum

Copy of Trial (1)

Bubble Wrap PLUS – February 2026

Copy of Trial (1)

The 98th Bubblewrap x John Radcliffe Hospital

Glycosuria HEADER

Glycosuria in Children – When to Worry, When to Wait

CF HEADER

Cystic fibrosis

PECARN LP HEADER

How Low Can You Go? Rethinking Lumbar Punctures for Well-Appearing Febrile Infants

Copy of Trial (1)

Bubble Wrap PLUS – January 2026

IBD v2 HEADER

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Earwax HEADER

Everything You Wanted to Know About Earwax* (But Were Afraid to Ask)

Tribalism HEADER

The Us Vs Them Problem- When Two Tribes Go To War

Copy of Trial (1)

The Christmas Bubble Wrap DFTB x Derby Children’s Emergency Department

AIWS HEADER

The reality behind Alice In Wonderland Syndome