| Ventricular tachycardia | Broad complex SVT | |
|---|---|---|
| History and clinical findings | Elderly patient Heart disease (myocardial infarction, cardiac insufficiency)  | Young patient Structurally a healthy heart  | 
| QRS duration and axis | Usually > 160 ms Abnormal frontal plane axis (over -45°) The QRS direction in all the precordial leads is consistent (concordance).  | Usually 120-140 ms Normal frontal plane axis or slight left axis deviation No QRS concordance  | 
| QRS shape | Changes according to the arrhythmia mechanism (differs from typical bundle branch block*) Fusion beats (intermediate between a normal beat and a VT beat). Capture beats, resembling normal QRS complexes, among the VT  | Typical RBBB or LBBB  | 
| Other ECG features | VA dissociation is diagnostic for VT, but is missing in about half the cases.  | 
| * In some ventricular tachycardias that originate from the conduction pathways the morphology of the QRS complexes may resemble that of typical bundle branch block | ||
| References | ||
| Alzand BS, Crijns HJ. Diagnostic criteria of broad QRS complex tachycardia: decades of evolution. Europace 2011;13(4):465-72. [PubMed] | ||