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Apex Nursing

Reference — Cardiac

ECG Measurements Reference

Accurate ECG interpretation depends on knowing normal measurement ranges and how to calculate them. This reference provides normal values for all major ECG intervals and explains the standard methods for calculating heart rate.

Educational use only. Reference ranges reflect standard adult values. Normal ranges may vary by age, sex, and clinical context. Always correlate ECG measurements with patient assessment and provider interpretation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

ECG Paper Basics

Standard ECG paper runs at 25 mm/second. Each small box = 0.04 seconds (40 ms); each large box (5 small boxes) = 0.20 seconds (200 ms).

UnitTimeNotes
1 small box0.04 sec (40 ms)Amplitude = 0.1 mV
1 large box (5 small)0.20 sec (200 ms)Amplitude = 0.5 mV
5 large boxes1.0 secUsed for rate estimation
30 large boxes6.0 secStandard strip length for 6-second count method

Normal ECG Measurements

MeasurementNormal RangeIn Small BoxesWhat It Represents
Heart Rate60–100 bpmVentricular rate
PR Interval0.12–0.20 sec3–5 small boxesSA node → AV node → bundle of His conduction
QRS Duration< 0.12 sec< 3 small boxesVentricular depolarization
QT IntervalRate-dependentVaries with HRVentricular depolarization + repolarization
QTc (corrected)≤ 0.44 sec (M) / ≤ 0.46 sec (F)≤ 11 small boxesHeart-rate corrected QT
ST SegmentIsoelectricFlat at baselineEarly ventricular repolarization

PR Interval

Measured from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS complex. Represents conduction time through the AV node and bundle of His.

  • Short (< 0.12 sec): Pre-excitation (WPW), junctional rhythm
  • Normal: 0.12–0.20 sec
  • Prolonged (> 0.20 sec): First-degree AV block
  • Progressive lengthening: Mobitz I (Wenckebach)
  • Constant but long, with dropped beats: Mobitz II
  • Variable (no consistent relationship): Third-degree AV block

QRS Duration

Measured from the beginning of the Q wave (or R wave if no Q) to the end of the S wave. Represents ventricular depolarization through the His-Purkinje system.

  • Normal: < 0.12 sec (narrow QRS — supraventricular origin)
  • Wide: ≥ 0.12 sec — causes include: bundle branch block, ventricular rhythm, hyperkalemia, antiarrhythmic toxicity, aberrant conduction
  • Wide QRS in tachycardia: Treat as VT until proven otherwise

QT Interval and QTc

The QT interval is measured from the beginning of the QRS to the end of the T wave. Because QT shortens at faster heart rates, the corrected QTc adjusts for rate using the Bazett formula: QTc = QT ÷ √RR interval.

QTc ValueInterpretationClinical Action
≤ 440 ms (M) / ≤ 460 ms (F)NormalRoutine monitoring
441–470 ms (M) / 461–480 ms (F)Borderline prolongedReview medications, monitor electrolytes
> 500 msSignificantly prolongedNotify provider; Torsades de Pointes risk

Common causes of QT prolongation: Hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia, amiodarone, sotalol, quinidine, antipsychotics (haloperidol, ziprasidone), macrolide antibiotics, fluoroquinolones, methadone.

Heart Rate Calculation Methods

300 Method (Regular Rhythms)

Count the large boxes between two consecutive R waves. Divide 300 by that number.

1 box = 300 bpm  |  2 = 150  |  3 = 100  |  4 = 75  |  5 = 60  |  6 = 50  |  7 = 43

1500 Method (Regular Rhythms — More Precise)

Count the small boxes between two consecutive R waves. Divide 1500 by that count.

6-Second Count Method (Irregular Rhythms)

Count the number of R waves (QRS complexes) in a 6-second strip (30 large boxes). Multiply by 10 to estimate the rate per minute.

Use this method for atrial fibrillation, irregular rhythms, or whenever R-R intervals vary.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with American Heart Association (AHA) · American College of Cardiology (ACC) · AHA ACLS Guidelines. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →