Lecture 6 Flashcards
treatment of torsade de pointes
magnesium sulfate
pulseless electrical activity
-PEA
◼ Just like it sounds…a rhythm that should be producing a pulse but is not
▪ Normal sinus rhythm + no pulse = PEA
▪ Atrial fibrillation + no pulse = PEA
◼ V-tach and V-fib are considered separate
entities from PEA though there is often no pulse present
cardioversion vs defibrillation
Cardioversion = Timed burst of electricity with hearth rhythm to avoid R on T waves Defibrillation = When you hit the button and the patient get shocked
stable vs unstable
◼ Hypotension (<90/<60 mmHg) ◼ Acute altered mental status ◼ Signs of shock Palecooldiapharemclammy ◼ Ischemic chest discomfort ◼ Acute Heart Failure
Hs and Ts
H’s Hypovolemia Hypoxia Hydrogen ion (acidosis) Hypo/hyperkalemia Hypothermia
T's Tamponade, cardiac Tension pneumothorax Toxins Thrombosis, pulmonary Thrombosis, coronary
adult brady with pulse
Differential Diagnosis
-AV block, BB, sick sinus, electrolyte imbalances
Sign or Symptom
- HR
- ECG (wideR R)
- Peripheral pulses (weak, diminished, absent)
- Capillary refill time (slow)
- Skin (clammy, pale)
- Mentation (slow)
Adult tachy with pulse: narrow complex
- Sinus Tachycardia SVT
- Atrial Fibrillation
- Atrial Flutter
- Accessory pathway-mediated
- Atrial Tachycardia
- Multifocal atrial tachycardia
- Junctional tachycardia (rare)
Adult tachy with pulse: wide complex
- Ventricular tachycardia/Vfib
- WPW
- Ventricular paced rhythms
- SVT with aberrancy
adult brady with pulse steps
- Do not delay tx but look for underlying causes
- Maintain airway & monitor cardiac rhythm, BP & oxygen saturation
- Establish IV/IO for meds
- If stable, call for consults
- If sx → atropine 0.5 mg bolus
-repeat atropine q3-5 min to
total dose of 3 mg - If atropine ineffective, consider transcutaneous pacing OR dopamine OR Epi infusion
adult tachy with pulse steps
- ID & tx the cause of the dysrhythmia
- Monitor cardiac rhythm, BP & oxygenation
- Stable or unstable
A. unstable → immediate synchronized
cardioversion regulareferstorhythm
a. Narrow regular: 50-100J
b. Narrow irregular: 120-200J e biphasic, or 200J monophasic
Ez
c. Wide regular: 100J
d. Wide irregular: defibrillationB. stable → Wide or narrow QRS?
cardiac arrest - asystole/PEA
When to terminate resuscitation efforts:
-Failure to respond to ACLS interventions
-Amount of time after collapse before CPR and
defibrillation began
-Length of the resuscitation effort; inc time generally
results in poor outcomes
-Any other comorbid dz or conditions
-Discovery of a “DNR” order for the victim
-Policies of the healthcare facility
-Low end-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) after 20
minutes of CPR in intubated victims (e.g., <10 mm Hg by capnography) w/ other items listed above
effusion and tamponade EKG findings
Effusion & Tamponade EKG Findings
◼ Pericardial effusion = low voltage of QRS
▪ Most common ECG sign
◼ Cardiac Tamponade = Electrical Alternans t.fm
▪ Virtually pathognomonic
▪ beat-to-beat shift in the QRS axis
low voltage ECG
defined as peak to peak QRS amplitude of <5mm in limb leads and/or 10 mm in the precordial leads
-may be due to obesity, COPD, pericardial effusion, sever hypothyroidism, subcutaneous emphysema, massive myocardial damage/infarction, infiltrative/restrictive diseases such as amyloid cardiomyopathy
Beck’s triad
For cardiag tamponade and pericardiocentesis
- hypotension
- JVD
- muffled heart sounds
ECG triad
cardiac tamponade and pericardiocentesis
- sinus tachy
- low voltage
- electrical alternans