The Tachycardic Patient Flashcards
You are the FY1 on call for the general medical wards. You are asked to review Mrs K - a 70 year old patient with a fast heart rate.
She was admitted 1 day ago with general deterioration and increased confusion. She is currently being treated for an upper UTI with IV antibiotics. She has a background of hypertension, AF and osteoporosis.
Her observations are:
HR 156, BP 121/78, RR 19, Sats 96% on air, T 36.8
a) Likely cause of her tachycardia?
b) How should you initially assess her?
a) Fast AF (no decompensation)
b) A-E:
Airway
-
Circulation
- Start peripherally: CRT, colour, temp, pulses, BP, JVP, heart sounds (murmurs?)
- IV access, bloods (FBC, CRP, UEs, TFTs, ?troponins, ?D-dimer)
- IV fluids? (assess volume status)
- HR and BP monitoring (cardiac monitoring)
- Do an ECG
- Urine output - catheter?
How to differentiate between arrhythmias.
- Narrow-complex or broad-complex
- Supraventricular or ventricular
- Regular or irregular
Management of fast AF.
a) Not decompensated
b) Decompensated
a) A-E
Drugs:
- BB or CCB for rate control first line
- Digoxin
- Chemical cardioversion (eg. fleicanide, propafenone, amiodarone)
*fleicanide and propafenone contraindicated in structural heart disease
DC cardioversion only if:
- Acute (< 48h)
- Anticoagulated for > 4 weeks
- Emergency
b) Decompensated:
- Cardiovert