Chapter 2 – Electrical Vectors & ECG Needle Deflection
Goal: Understand why the ECG trace goes up or down using real vector logic—so you don’t need rote memorization.
- Why the ECG needle moves up or down
- True meaning of positive vs negative deflection
- Vector direction, strength, and velocity (speed) and how they shape waves
- How ECG waves are formed during depolarization and repolarization
1) What Does an ECG Machine Really Record?
An ECG does not record “raw electricity.” It records the net electrical vector produced by the heart at any moment.
A vector is a moving electrical force that has:
- Direction (where it points)
- Magnitude/Strength (how big it is)
- Velocity (how fast it changes/spreads)
2) Electrodes, Leads & The Needle: The Basic Setup
Every lead has two ends:
- A positive electrode (the “viewpoint” of the lead)
- A negative electrode (the opposite end)
| Condition (What the vector does) | Needle Deflection (What you see) |
|---|---|
| Net positive activity moves toward the positive electrode | Upward (positive deflection) |
| Net positive activity moves away from the positive electrode | Downward (negative deflection) |
| No net vector (or equal forces cancel) | Straight line (isoelectric) |
3) Vector Direction & Deflection: The Golden Rule
Like charges moving toward like electrode → Positive deflection
That means:
- Positive charge → toward + electrode ⇒ positive (upward)
- Negative charge → toward – electrode ⇒ also positive (upward)
Why this rule matters (especially for repolarization)
Repolarization involves a different “polarity story” than depolarization. Students get confused because they imagine “repolarization = negative wave.” Not always.
The ECG deflection is not “good vs bad.” It is simply geometry: How does the net vector align with that lead?
Quick mental model (no memorization)
- Decide the lead’s positive direction (where the + electrode is).
- Ask: “Is the net vector pointing toward + or away from +?”
- If toward + → upward. If away from + → downward. If perpendicular/neutral → small/flat.
4) Vector Strength (Magnitude) — Tissue Thickness Effect
The strength of a vector depends on how much myocardium is participating:
- More muscle involved → stronger vector
- Less muscle involved → weaker vector
| Myocardium | ECG Result |
|---|---|
| Thin tissue (e.g., atria) | Small wave (low amplitude) |
| Thick tissue (e.g., ventricles) | Tall wave (high amplitude) |
Clinical intuition
5) Vector Velocity (Speed) — Why Some Waves Are Narrow or Wide
The speed of conduction affects the shape (width/sharpness) of the ECG wave. Faster spread = quicker completion = narrow/sharp wave. Slower spread = prolonged completion = broad wave.
| Conduction Type | ECG Appearance |
|---|---|
| Slow conduction | Broad / wide / sluggish wave |
| Fast conduction | Sharp / narrow / steep wave |
6) Normal Myocardium vs Specialized Conduction Tissue
Normal Myocardium
- Cell-to-cell spread
- Relatively fewer/effective gap junction pathways
- Moderate conduction velocity
Result: activation takes more time → wave can look less sharp.
Specialized Conduction Tissue
- Larger diameter fibers
- More efficient coupling (gap junction connectivity)
- Fast conduction velocity
Result: activation completes quickly → wave becomes sharp/narrow (especially QRS).
7) Why Is the Purkinje System So Fast?
Purkinje fibers are engineered for speed. Common reasons taught in ECG foundations:
- Large diameter fibers (less resistance to current spread)
- Efficient electrical coupling between cells
- Fast upstroke depolarization dominated by sodium channels (fast-response tissue)
- Resting membrane potential around –90 mV → sodium channels are “ready” → strong, fast upstroke
8) Needle + Paper Movement: Why the Trace Looks Like a Wave
The ECG machine combines two motions:
- Paper moves at a constant speed (time is moving forward)
- Needle moves up/down based on the net vector seen by the lead
| Scenario | Needle Response | What You See |
|---|---|---|
| No electrical activity / no net vector | Stable | Straight line (baseline) |
| Weak vector | Small movement | Small deflection |
| Strong & fast vector | Large, rapid movement | Tall, sharp deflection |
9) Complete Cycle Example (Conceptual)
This is a simplified “story” of what the lead sees during one cycle:
| Myocardial State | Net Vector | ECG Trace |
|---|---|---|
| Resting myocardium | No net vector | Flat baseline |
| Depolarization moving toward + electrode | Vector toward + | Upward wave |
| Fully depolarized tissue | No net vector (uniform state) | Returns to baseline |
| Repolarization (often slower than depolarization) | Vector depends on direction & polarity | Can be upward or downward based on lead alignment |
Instead, apply geometry: Where is the net vector pointing relative to the lead?
Quick Practice (Self-Check)
Q1. A depolarization wave moves directly toward the positive electrode of Lead X. What deflection do you expect?
Show Answer
Upward (positive) because the net vector points toward the + electrode.
Q2. A strong ventricular activation is seen almost perpendicular to the lead axis. What happens to amplitude?
Show Answer
The amplitude becomes small because the lead “doesn’t see” much of that vector when it is near perpendicular.
Q3. Slow conduction through ventricular tissue (e.g., conduction delay) tends to make QRS look how?
Show Answer
Wider/broader because activation takes longer (width reflects time).
Chapter 2 Summary (High-Yield)
- ECG records the net electrical vector, not “raw electricity.”
- Deflection depends mainly on direction relative to the + electrode.
- Strength depends on muscle mass involved (atria small, ventricles large).
- Velocity shapes wave width: fast → narrow/sharp, slow → broad/wide.
- Purkinje system is fast → supports a sharp QRS in normal conduction.
- Use the rule: toward + → up, away from + → down; cancel/perpendicular → small/flat.
