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Patient is under 35 years old (high rate of false positives), has a Bundle Branch Block (LBBB/RBBB), or has ventricular pacing. The criteria lose validity when normal ventricular depolarization is disrupted.
LVH increases the total muscle mass of the left ventricle. This generates a larger electrical vector directed posteriorly and to the left. On an ECG, this manifests as deeper negative deflections (S waves) in right-sided pre-cordial leads (V1/V2) and taller positive deflections (R waves) in left-sided leads (V5/V6, aVL, I).
ECG criteria for LVH have notoriously poor sensitivity (often ~20-30%) but high specificity (~85-95%). A patient with severe concentric LVH on echocardiogram can easily have a completely normal ECG (e.g., if they are obese, which dampens the voltage). Therefore, a negative ECG absolutely DOES NOT rule out LVH.
True LVH often comes with "strain pattern": ST-segment depression and asymmetric T-wave inversion in the lateral leads (I, aVL, V5, V6). If voltage criteria are met AND a strain pattern is present, the specificity for actual anatomical hypertrophy approaches 100%.
The ventricular complex in left ventricular hypertrophy as obtained by unipolar precordial and limb leads.
Sokolow-Lyon Voltage Criteria: The most widely used ECG criteria for predicting Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH). Uses standard 10mm/mV calibration (1 mm = 1 small box).