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VT vs SVT with Aberrancy - Brugada Algorithm

Brugada Algorithm for Wide-Complex Tachycardia

VT vs SVT with Aberrancy

Why the Brugada Algorithm Matters

Wide-complex tachycardia (WCT) is ventricular tachycardia (VT) until proven otherwise. Mislabeling VT as supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) with aberrancy can lead to inappropriate therapy and hemodynamic collapse.

The Brugada algorithm provides a stepwise, ECG-based approach to rapidly differentiate VT from SVT with aberrancy using standard 12-lead ECG features.



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When to Apply the Algorithm


Regular WCT (QRS ≥ 120 ms)


Stable or unstable patient (do not delay cardioversion in instability)


No obvious pacing spikes or polymorphic rhythms




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Step-by-Step Brugada Algorithm



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Step 1: Absence of RS Complexes in All Precordial Leads (V1–V6)


Look for RS complexes (an R wave followed by an S wave).


If no RS complex in any precordial lead → VT



Interpretation


Pure monophasic R or S waves across V1–V6 strongly favor VT.




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Step 2: RS Interval > 100 ms in Any Precordial Lead


Measure from onset of R wave to nadir of S wave.


RS interval > 100 ms → VT



Physiology


Slow myocardial conduction in VT prolongs ventricular activation compared with fast His–Purkinje conduction in SVT.




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Step 3: Atrioventricular (AV) Dissociation


Look for:


P waves marching through QRS


Fusion beats


Capture beats



If AV dissociation present → VT



Pearl


AV dissociation is highly specific for VT, even if subtle.




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Step 4: Morphologic Criteria (V1–V2 and V6)


Apply bundle-branch-block–like morphology rules.


If RBBB-like pattern:


Monophasic R or qR in V1


Broad or slurred S in V6

→ VT favored



If LBBB-like pattern:


Broad initial R (>30–40 ms) in V1


Notched or slurred downstroke of S


Delayed nadir of S

→ VT favored



If morphology consistent with VT → VT

If none of the above → SVT with aberrancy



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Final Diagnosis Logic


Any positive step = VT


Only if all four steps are negative, consider SVT with aberrancy




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Practical Clinical Pearls


VT accounts for ≈80% of WCT in adults, especially with structural heart disease.


The Brugada algorithm prioritizes specificity over sensitivity—designed to avoid missing VT.


When in doubt, treat as VT.


Anti-VT therapy is generally safer than AV-nodal blockers in undifferentiated WCT.




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Common Pitfalls


Missing subtle RS complexes


Incorrect RS interval measurement


Over-reliance on morphology alone


Assuming young age excludes VT (it does not)




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Comparison With Other Algorithms


Brugada: Stepwise, easy bedside use


Vereckei (aVR): Single-lead focus, helpful when precordials unclear


Wellens criteria: Older, morphology-heavy



No algorithm is perfect—clinical context + ECG together provide the best accuracy.


Bottom Line


The Brugada algorithm is a practical, high-yield tool for differentiating VT from SVT with aberrancy in wide-complex tachycardia.

If any step suggests VT, manage as VT—when uncertain, VT is the safest assumption.

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