Palpitations: MCCQE1 Preparation Guide
CanMEDS Focus
Medical Expert: Differentiate between benign and life-threatening causes of palpitations.<br/> Communicator: Effectively gather history regarding frequency and triggers.<br/> Health Advocate: Discuss lifestyle modifications (caffeine, alcohol) and driving safety.
Introduction
Palpitations are defined as an unpleasant awareness of the forceful, rapid, or irregular beating of the heart. It is a common presenting complaint in Canadian primary care and emergency departments. For the MCCQE1, candidates must demonstrate a structured approach to differentiate between cardiac (arrhythmic/structural), psychiatric, and metabolic etiologies.
MCCQE1 Insight: While many cases are benign, the primary goal is to rule out life-threatening arrhythmias or structural heart disease. Always assess hemodynamic stability first.
Etiology and Differential Diagnosis
The differential diagnosis for palpitations is broad. A useful framework for MCCQE1 preparation is to categorize by system.
Cardiac (Arrhythmic)
- Supraventricular:
- Atrial Fibrillation (AF) / Atrial Flutter
- Supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT)
- Premature Atrial Contractions (PACs)
- Ventricular:
- Premature Ventricular Contractions (PVCs)
- Ventricular Tachycardia (VT) - Life-threatening
- Ventricular Fibrillation (VF)
- Bradyarrhythmias:
- Sick Sinus Syndrome
- High-grade AV block
Clinical Evaluation
History Taking
A detailed history is the most important tool for diagnosis. Use the OPQRST mnemonic tailored for palpitations.
- Onset: Sudden (SVT) vs. Gradual (Sinus Tach).
- Provocation/Palliation: Exercise (Ischemia/HOCM), Position changes (Orthostatic), Post-prandial (Vagal).
- Quality: “Flip-flopping” (PVCs/PACs), “Fluttering” (AF), “Pounding in neck” (Cannon A waves in AVNRT).
- Radiation: Not applicable, but ask about chest pain radiation.
- Severity: Impact on daily life.
- Timing: Duration and frequency.
Red Flags (Must Rule Out)
⚠️ MCCQE1 Red Flags
- Syncope or Presyncope: Suggests hemodynamic compromise or malignant arrhythmia.
- Family History of Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD): Think HOCM, Long QT Syndrome, Brugada.
- Palpitations during Exertion: Suggests ischemia, HOCM, or catecholaminergic VT.
- History of Structural Heart Disease: Prior MI, heart failure.
Physical Examination
Perform a focused exam looking for signs of structural heart disease or systemic causes.
- Vitals: Pulse (rate, rhythm), BP (check for orthostasis), O2 saturation.
- Neck: JVP (elevated in HF), Cannon A waves (AV dissociation), Thyroid enlargement/bruit.
- Cardiac:
- Displaced PMI (Cardiomyopathy).
- Murmurs (HOCM: systolic crescendo-decrescendo increases with Valsalva; MVP: mid-systolic click).
- Respiratory: Crackles (Heart Failure).
- Extremities: Edema, tremor (Hyperthyroidism), track marks (Drug use).
Diagnostic Approach
For the MCCQE1, knowing the correct order of investigations is crucial. Follow this algorithm:
Step 1: 12-Lead ECG
The initial and most important test for all patients with palpitations.
- Look for: Pre-excitation (Delta waves - WPW), Long QT, LVH, signs of prior MI, acute arrhythmia.
- Note: A normal resting ECG does not rule out paroxysmal arrhythmias.
Step 2: Laboratory Workup
Tailor based on history, but standard screen includes:
- CBC: Rule out anemia/infection.
- Electrolytes: K+, Mg2+, Ca2+.
- TSH: Rule out hyperthyroidism (CanMEDS: Resource Stewardship - don’t order free T4 unless TSH is abnormal).
- Glucose: Hypoglycemia.
Step 3: Ambulatory Monitoring
If the resting ECG is non-diagnostic and symptoms are paroxysmal. Selection depends on frequency:
| Frequency of Symptoms | Recommended Test | Canadian Context |
|---|---|---|
| Daily | 24-48 hour Holter Monitor | Standard first-line for frequent symptoms. |
| Weekly / Monthly | Event Loop Recorder (ELR) | Patient activates device when symptoms occur. |
| Very Rare (months) | Implantable Loop Recorder (ILR) | Subcutaneous device; battery lasts years. |
Step 4: Echocardiogram
Indicated if:
- Abnormal cardiac physical exam (murmur).
- History of structural heart disease.
- Abnormal ECG suggest structural issues (LBBB, Q waves).
- Family history of SCD.
Canadian Guidelines & Management
Atrial Fibrillation (CCS Guidelines)
The Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) guidelines are high-yield for the MCCQE1.
- “CCS Algorithm” for AF:
- Assess Thromboembolic Risk: Use CHADS-65 (Canadian modification of CHADS2-Vasc).
- Age ≥ 65 OR History of Stroke/TIA OR Hypertension, Diabetes, or HF?
- If Yes -> Oral Anticoagulation (DOACs preferred over Warfarin unless mechanical valve/severe mitral stenosis).
- Symptom Management: Rate control (Beta-blockers, CCBs) vs. Rhythm control (Cardioversion, Anti-arrhythmics, Ablation).
- Assess Thromboembolic Risk: Use CHADS-65 (Canadian modification of CHADS2-Vasc).
Driving Restrictions (CMA Driver’s Guide)
In Canada, physicians have a duty to report medical conditions that affect driving.
- Syncope + Palpitations: Private driving is generally suspended until the cause is identified and treated.
- Ventricular Tachycardia: Strict restrictions apply depending on underlying cause and treatment efficacy.
Exam Tip: Always consider “counseling on driving cessation” as an immediate management step for patients with palpitations accompanied by syncope or presyncope.
Key Points to Remember for MCCQE1
- Most common cause: In primary care, the most common causes are psychiatric (anxiety) or benign ectopy (PVCs/PACs), but cardiac causes must be ruled out.
- Vagal maneuvers: Valsalva or carotid massage can terminate SVT (AVNRT).
- Adenosine: The first-line drug for stable narrow-complex tachycardia (SVT) unresponsive to vagal maneuvers.
- Unstable patient: If a patient with palpitations is hypotensive, has chest pain, or altered mental status -> Synchronized Cardioversion.
- Thyroid: Always check TSH in new-onset Atrial Fibrillation.
Common Abbreviations
AF : Atrial Fibrillation
SVT : Supraventricular Tachycardia
WPW : Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome
HOCM : Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy
PVC : Premature Ventricular Contraction
CCS : Canadian Cardiovascular Society
CHADS : Congestive HF, Hypertension, Age, Diabetes, StrokeSample Question
Clinical Scenario
A 55-year-old female presents to the emergency department with a 2-hour history of rapid heart palpitations, shortness of breath, and lightheadedness. She has no significant past medical history. Vitals:
- Heart Rate: 160 bpm (regular)
- Blood Pressure: 85/50 mmHg
- Respiratory Rate: 24/min
- O2 Saturation: 92% on room air
Physical examination reveals cool extremities and bibasilar crackles. An ECG monitor shows a regular, narrow-complex tachycardia. Vagal maneuvers have been attempted without success.
Which one of the following is the most appropriate immediate management step?
Options
- A. Intravenous adenosine 6 mg push
- B. Intravenous metoprolol 5 mg push
- C. Synchronized electrical cardioversion
- D. Intravenous amiodarone infusion
- E. Defibrillation (unsynchronized)
Explanation
The correct answer is:
- C. Synchronized electrical cardioversion
Detailed Analysis
This question tests the management of unstable tachyarrhythmias, a critical concept for the MCCQE1 and ACLS protocols.
-
Identify Stability: The patient is unstable. Signs of instability include:
- Hypotension (BP 85/50)
- Signs of shock (cool extremities)
- Signs of heart failure (bibasilar crackles, hypoxia)
- Altered mental status (lightheadedness is a precursor, though not fully altered yet, the hypotension dictates action).
-
Rhythm Identification: The patient has a regular, narrow-complex tachycardia (likely SVT or Atrial Flutter).
-
Management Decision:
- Stable SVT: Vagal maneuvers -> Adenosine -> Beta-blockers/CCBs.
- Unstable Tachycardia (with a pulse): Synchronized Cardioversion.
- Pulseless VT/VF: Defibrillation (Unsynchronized).
- Why C is correct: According to ACLS guidelines, unstable patients with a pulse and tachyarrhythmia require immediate synchronized cardioversion.
- Why A is incorrect: Adenosine is the treatment of choice for stable SVT. While it can be considered while preparing for cardioversion, it should not delay cardioversion in a hypotensive patient with signs of shock/failure.
- Why B is incorrect: Beta-blockers (metoprolol) can further lower blood pressure and worsen heart failure in an unstable patient.
- Why D is incorrect: Amiodarone is used for rhythm control but is slower acting and not the immediate treatment for instability.
- Why E is incorrect: Unsynchronized cardioversion (defibrillation) is used for cardiac arrest (VF or pulseless VT). Using it on a patient with a pulse and an organized rhythm can induce VF (R-on-T phenomenon).
References
- Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS). (2020). CCS Guidelines for the Management of Atrial Fibrillation. Retrieved from ccs.ca
- Medical Council of Canada. (n.d.). Objectives for the Qualifying Examination Part I: Palpitations.
- Canadian Medical Association. (2019). CMA Driver’s Guide: Determining Medical Fitness to Operate Motor Vehicles. 9th Edition.
- UpToDate. (2023). Evaluation of palpitations in adults.
- Toronto Notes. (2023). Cardiology: Approach to Arrhythmias.