S wave in V1 and R wave in V5/V6 > 35 mm ✅
This is the classic Sokolow–Lyon criterion for LVH.
The logic is simple: a thick left ventricle produces huge depolarization forces moving toward the left side of the chest. That creates:
• Very deep S wave in V1 (because the electrical vector moves away from V1)
• Tall R wave in V5 or V6 (because the vector moves toward these lateral leads)
When the sum exceeds 35 mm, the likelihood of LVH is high.
Often accompanied by T-wave inversions in the lateral leads (called “strain pattern”), but these are secondary, not the main diagnostic criterion.
Incorrect Options
Inverted T waves in inferior leads ❌
This reflects ischemia, inferior wall injury, or sometimes pericarditis—not LVH. LVH produces T-wave inversion in lateral leads, not inferior ones.
R wave in V1 and V2 > 25 mm ❌
Tall R waves in V1–V2 suggest right ventricular hypertrophy or posterior wall MI. LVH causes deep S waves in V1, not tall R waves.
Prominent Q wave in aVF ❌
A prominent Q in aVF points toward old inferior myocardial infarction, not ventricular hypertrophy.
Prolonged PR interval ❌
This represents first-degree AV block, a conduction delay between atria and ventricles. It has nothing to do with ventricular muscle mass.