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Reading EKGs as an FNP: From Bedside to Diagnosis

As an RN, your EKG job was usually recognition — is this a normal sinus rhythm or not? As an FNP in primary care, you'll be interpreting EKGs ordered for chest pain, palpitations, hypertension workup, pre-op clearance, and routine baselines. The FNP boards tests this. Most candidates underprepare for it.

Here's the framework I teach my students for FNP-level EKG interpretation.

You don't need cardiology-level expertise. You need to identify what's normal, recognize what's dangerous, and know when to refer.

The Six-Step Approach

Every EKG you read in primary care should run through these steps in order.

  1. Rate — normal 60 to 100.
  2. Rhythm — regular vs. irregular; sinus origin or not.
  3. Axis — normal, left, or right deviation.
  4. Intervals — PR (0.12 to 0.20), QRS (<0.12), QT (corrected <0.45 male, <0.46 female).
  5. Hypertrophy — left or right ventricular.
  6. Ischemia or infarction — ST depression, ST elevation, Q waves, T wave inversion.

The Most-Tested Findings on the FNP Exam

Atrial fibrillation

Irregularly irregular, no discernible P waves. The exam wants you to order rate control (beta blocker or CCB), assess CHA2DS2-VASc score, and decide on anticoagulation. Score ≥2 in men or ≥3 in women → anticoagulate.

Left ventricular hypertrophy

Sokolow-Lyon criteria: S in V1 + R in V5 or V6 ≥ 35 mm. Common in chronic hypertension. Implies long-standing pressure overload.

STEMI vs. NSTEMI

ST elevation in 2 or more contiguous leads = STEMI. Cath lab activation. Time is muscle. Anything else with troponin elevation = NSTEMI. Less time-critical but still admission.

First-degree AV block

PR > 0.20 seconds, every beat. Generally benign in primary care. Watch over time.

Right bundle branch block

QRS > 0.12, rabbit-ear pattern in V1 (rSR'), wide S in lateral leads. Often benign in isolation.

Left bundle branch block

QRS > 0.12, broad notched R in V5/V6, deep wide S in V1. New LBBB is a STEMI equivalent in the setting of chest pain.

Clinical Pearl: A new LBBB in a patient with chest pain should be treated as if it were a STEMI until proven otherwise. This is a tested concept.

The Five Lead Groups

Memorize which leads look at which wall of the heart. This determines which coronary artery is involved.

The FNP exam may show you an EKG with ST elevation in II, III, aVF and ask which artery is involved. You answer: right coronary.

When to Refer

Refer to cardiology when you see:

What to Drill

Get a stack of practice EKGs. Run every one through your six-step framework. Time yourself. By the time you sit for boards, the six steps should take 30 seconds, not 3 minutes.

EKG interpretation is procedural memory. It rewards drilling.

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