ECG Atrial/Ventricular Rhythms Flashcards
Management of bradycardia
Atropine, dopamine, Epi, transcutaneous pacemaker (TCP)
Atropine cardiac indication, dose
Bradycardia
0.5 mg bolus, repeat 3-5 min, max 3 mg
Dopamine for bradycardia cardiac indication, dose
Bradycardia
2-20 mcg/kg/min infusion, titrate slowly to pt response
Epi for bradycardia cardiac indication, dose
2-10 mcg over 1 minute
Titrate to pt response
Transcutaneous Pacemaker (TCP)
Bradycardia after atropine
Widespread QRS complex
Sinus dysthymia
Slight variation of a sinus rhythm
Sinus arrest
SA node fails to initiate impulse for 1 cardiac cycle (missing complex)
Premature atrial complex (PAC) traits, ECG traits
SA node fires prematurely, short RR interval
Odd P shape
Nonconducted PAC
Early P wave w/o QRS complex
Infrequent, no pattern
Supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT) traits
Impulse originates above ventricles
>150 bpm, sometimes missing P waves
Difference between SVT and VT
Wide QRS - ventricular origin
Narrow QRS - supraventricular origin (more like normal)
Synchronized cardioversion indications
Unstable patient w tachydysrhythmia
Must be sedated
Stable pt w/ >150 bpm & narrow QRS complex, drug
Adenosine
Adenosine action, dose
Slows conduction through AV node
6 mg + flush, second dose 12 mg
Antiarhythmic infusions for stable wide QRS complex tachycardia
Amiodarone, Sotalol, Procainamide
Amiodarone dose for tachycardia
150 mg over 10 minutes
Maintenance infusion of 1mg/min
Sotalol dose for tachycardia, contraindication
100 mg (1.5 mcg/kg) over 5 min
Contraindication: COPD/asthma
Atrial Fibrillation
Many myocardial cells in atrium depolarize independently
No P wave, irregularly irregular
Unstable pt: synchronized cardioversion
Atrial flutter
Atrial impulse fires too rapidly for ventricles to keep up
Shows F waves (sawtooth shape) instead of P waves (2:1 conduction)
Unstable pt: synchronized cardioversion
Wandering atrial pacemaker
Impulse comes from random atrial cells
60-100 bpm, slightly irregular
Upright P waves with varying shape
Only treatment if bradycardic,
Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia
> 100 bpm, tachycardic wandering pacemaker
Difference between multifocal atrial tachycardia & SVT
SVT is a regular rhythm
MAT is a irregular rhythm
SVT meds do not work on MAT
Rhythms originating from AV junction
40-60 bpm
Inverted P wave before or after QRS, could be nonexistent
Premature Junctional Complex (PJC)
An early beat, irregular
P wave (if present) inverted before or after QRS
No prehospital treatment
Accelerated Junctional Rhythm
An early beat, irregular, 60 < bpm < 100
P wave (if present) inverted before or after QRS
No prehospital treatment
Junctional Tachycardia
Bpm > 100
If >150 bpm and symptomatic, then treat as tachycardia or SVT
Rhythms originating from ventricles
No P wave, wide QRS complex
Premature Ventricular Complex (PVC)
No P wave, QRS > 0.12 sec
Full pause after PVC
Mostly from ischemia in ventricles
Unifocal PVC vs Mulifocal PVC
Unifocal: PVC originates from same area, start of QRS complex look alike
Multifocal: PVC originates from different parts of the ventricle, different QRS complex shapes