R Lost Pause

Pauses – Sinus Arrest / Sinus Block

Sinus Arrest or Sinus block is commonly referred to as a Pause. This occurs when there is a conduction block causing in the sinus node and/or the atrium causing a delay or ‘pause’ in the ventricular contraction. Pauses can also be caused by a blocked PAC. If pauses are prolonged, nodal or ventricular escape beats may be seen. In Sinoatrial (SA) Block, the length of the pause is a multiple of a regular cycle. Sinus arrest does not measure out to a multiple of a regular cycle length. Blocked PACs also result in dropped beats, but the P wave is premature with no QRS.

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Characteristics can include:

  • Prolonged R-R interval approximately the length of one cycle
  • Absence of a P wave
  • P wave which is on time
  • Premature P wave that is blocked

Following the pause, an escape beat may occur from the sinus node, atria, AV Node, or the ventricles. Typically, the dropped beat does not produce a prolonged R-R interval long enough to be called a Pause (2 seconds). However, this arrhythmia can be seen in context by observing rate, rhythm, and pattern change of ECG.

Pauses are considered significant as a serious Supraventricular arrhythmia due to severe consequences. If the pause duration is long enough, it can cause the patient to faint or even collapse. Not only does this represent danger, but consistent pauses can indicate risk for mechanical failure of the heart. Patients with persistent and severe pauses may require an implantable pacemaker.

R/lostPause

Example of Pause:

For Pause Evaluation:

  • Select a strip long enough to show the recovery from the pause.
  • Use calipers to measure and show the length of the pause.
  • Show examples of different escape mechanisms (ventricular and nodal escape beats).
Sys.sleep {base}R Documentation

Suspend Execution for a Time Interval

Description

Suspend execution of R expressions for a specified time interval.

Usage

Arguments

time

The time interval to suspend execution for, in seconds.

Details

Using this function allows R to temporarily be given very lowpriority and hence not to interfere with more important foregroundtasks. A typical use is to allow a process launched from R to setitself up and read its input files before R execution is resumed.

The intention is that this function suspends execution of Rexpressions but wakes the process up often enough to respond to GUIevents, typically every half second. It can be interrupted(e.g. by Ctrl-C or Esc at the R console).

There is no guarantee that the process will sleep for the whole of thespecified interval (sleep might be interrupted), and it may well takeslightly longer in real time to resume execution.

time must be non-negative (and not NA nor NaN):Inf is allowed (and might be appropriate if the intention is towait indefinitely for an interrupt). The resolution of the timeinterval is system-dependent, but will normally be 20ms or better.(On modern Unix-alikes it will be better than 1ms.)

Value

Invisible NULL.

Note

Despite its name, this is not currently implemented using thesleep system call (although on Windows it does make use ofSleep).

Lost Pause Reddit

Examples