Ventricular Arryhthmias Flashcards

1
Q

Torsades de Pointes What is it? What does it look like on an ECG/

A
  • 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
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2
Q

What are the causes of prolonged QT (and therefore potentially torsades)?

A
  • Long QT Syndrome (inherited)
  • Medications (antipsychotics, citalopram, flecainide, sotalol, amiodarone, macrolide antibiotics i.e. clarithromycin)
  • Electrolyte Disturbance (hypokalaemia, hypomagnesaemia, hypocalcaemia)
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3
Q

Torsades de Pointes

Acute management

A

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]

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4
Q

Long term management of prolonged QT syndrome

A

Avoid medications that prolong the QT interval

Correct electrolyte disturbances

Beta blockers (not sotalol)

Pacemaker or implantable defibrillator

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5
Q

Ventricular Ectopics

What are they?

Clinical Features

ECG bigeminy

Management

A

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)
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6
Q

Ventricular Fibrillation

Clinical Features

A

CLINICAL FEATURES

  • Pulseless
  • Shockable
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7
Q

Ventricular Tachycardia

Clinical Feature

ECG feature

Management

A

CLINICAL:

  • a canon waves on JVP

ECG:

  • broad QRS complexes

MANAGEMENT:

  • Amiodarone
  • only cardioversion if pulseless
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8
Q

What is this?

A

Ventricular fibrillation

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9
Q

What is this?

A

Torsades de pointes

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10
Q

What is this?

A

Bigeminy - where the ventricular ectopic beat happens so often it occurs after every sinus beat

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11
Q

What is this?

A

Ventricular Tachycardia

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