Ventricular Arryhthmias Flashcards
Torsades de Pointes What is it? What does it look like on an ECG/
- Torsades is a polymorphic (multiple shape) ventricular tachycardia
ECG:
- normal ventricular tachycardia on an ECG however there is an appearance that the QRS complex is twisting around the baseline
- The height of the QRS complexes progressively get smaller, then larger then smaller and so on.
- It occurs in patients with a prolonged QT interval.
- irregular QRS complexes
What are the causes of prolonged QT (and therefore potentially torsades)?
- Long QT Syndrome (inherited)
- Medications (antipsychotics, citalopram, flecainide, sotalol, amiodarone, macrolide antibiotics i.e. clarithromycin)
- Electrolyte Disturbance (hypokalaemia, hypomagnesaemia, hypocalcaemia)
Torsades de Pointes
Acute management
Correct the cause (electrolyte disturbances or medications)
Magnesium infusion (even if they have a normal serum magnesium)
Defibrillation if VT occurs [Usually torsades are self limiting but if they progress to VT it can lead to a cardiac arrest so would need defibtillation]
Long term management of prolonged QT syndrome
Avoid medications that prolong the QT interval
Correct electrolyte disturbances
Beta blockers (not sotalol)
Pacemaker or implantable defibrillator
Ventricular Ectopics
What are they?
Clinical Features
ECG bigeminy
Management
Ventricular ectopics are premature ventricular beats caused by random electrical discharges from outside the atria
CLINICAL FEATURES:
- random, brief palpitations (“an abnormal beat”)
- more common in those with history of ischaemic heart disease or heart failure
BIGEMINY
- Bigeminy is where the ventricular ectopics are occurring so frequently that they happen after every sinus beat.
- ECG looks like a normal sinus beat followed immediately by an ectopic, then a normal beat, then ectopic and so on.
MANAGEMENT
- Check bloods for anaemia, electrolyte disturbance and thyroid abnormalities
- Reassurance and no treatment in otherwise healthy people
- Seek expert advice in patients with background heart conditions or other concerning features or findings (e.g. chest pain, syncope, murmur, family history of sudden death)
Ventricular Fibrillation
Clinical Features
CLINICAL FEATURES
- Pulseless
- Shockable
Ventricular Tachycardia
Clinical Feature
ECG feature
Management
CLINICAL:
- a canon waves on JVP
ECG:
- broad QRS complexes
MANAGEMENT:
- Amiodarone
- only cardioversion if pulseless
What is this?
Ventricular fibrillation
What is this?
Torsades de pointes
What is this?
Bigeminy - where the ventricular ectopic beat happens so often it occurs after every sinus beat
What is this?
Ventricular Tachycardia