Title: Name That Rhythm
1Name That Rhythm
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9And you thought we wouldnt review..
10Heart A P
- Location
- Pieces, Parts
- Important Vessels
- Electrolyte Role
- Pulling apart waveforms
11Valves Vessels
12Review of Important Vessels
13The Components
- SA Node
- Internodal Pathways
- AV Junction
- AV Node
- Bundle of His
- L R Bundle Branch
- Purkinje Network
- Purkinje Fibers
14The Route
15Sino Atrial Node
- The Natural Pacemaker
- Connects directly to atrial fibers
- Fires 60-100 times per minute
- Wavelike Atrial Depolarization
- The P-Wave
16AV Junction
- Receives impulses from SA Node via the Atrial
Cells - An electrical funnel
- Impulses hit at various times
- Causes delay
- PR-I
- Susceptible to blockage
- Path from A to V
- Delivers impulse to the AV Node
17Atrio-Ventricular Node
- Lies between the Atria and Ventricles
- Collects impulses from above
- Stimulates Ventricles
- If unstimulated
- Intrinsic rate 40-60
18Bundle of His / Left and Right Bundle Branches
- Distributes Impulses from the Node
- The Ventricular Messengers
19Purkinje Network/Fibers
- Direct connection with ventricular tissue
- Intrinsic rate 20-40 if unstimulated
20Electrical Conduction System
- Sympathetic-Thoracic/Lumbar Nerve
- Norepinephrine
- HR, Contractility
- Parasympathetic-Vagus Nerve
- Acetylcholine
- HR (Valsalva)
- Chronotropic-HR
- Inotropic-Contraction
21Electrical Conduction System
- Na in K out Depolarization
- K in Na out Repolarization
- Imbalances in K or Na
- Effects Automaticity Conduction
- Hypo hyperkalemia affects irritability
- Ca - Depolarization and Contraction
- Affects Contractility
- Hypo Hypercalcemia effects contractile force
22Phases
- Phase 0 Rapid Depolarization
- Reached max potential -90mV
- Fast Na Channels Open
- Cell now positive 25mV
- Phase 1 Early Rapid Repolarization
- Fast Na Channels Close
- K still being lost
- MP approaching 0mV
- Phase 2 Prolonged Slow Repolarization
- Plateau Phase
- Muscle finishing contraction
- Beginning to relax
- MP staying close to 0mV
23Phases
- Phase 3 End of Rapid Repolarization
- K returns to inside
- Cell returns to -90mV
- Almost ready
- Phase 4
- Na - K Pump turns on
- Sends Na out
- Brings K in
- Ready to do it all over again now ?
24Refractory PeriodsExcuse me!!! I hate to
interrupt again, but, who cares???
- Absolute Refractory Period
- Polarity of cell prohibits depolarization
- Relative Refractory Period
- Cell is returning to ready state for
depolarization - Impulse now is BAD!!!
- R on T Phenomenon
- Causes VT VF
- Treated with defibrillation
- Can be caused by
- Frequent PVCs
- EMT-P not pushing the sync button
25QRS Complex
26Lead Considerations
- 25,000 mVoltmeter
- Lead Views
- 1 Lateral
- 2 Inferior
- 3 Inferior
27The Six Step Approach
- What is the Rate?
- Is the Rhythm Regular?
- Are there P-Waves?
- Is the P-R Interval Normal?
- Is the QRS Complex Normal?
- Is There a P-Wave for Every QRS?
28Describe What Youve Found!!!
- IN GENERAL (underlying rhythms)!!!
- What are the abnormalities?
- Does it originate in the Sinus Node?
- Does it follow through from the Atria to the
ventricles? Are there abnormal delays? - What are the exceptions to the underlying rhythm?
(Describe those also)
29Normal Sinus Rhythm
- Rate 60 - 100
- Regularity Very
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I 0.12-0.20 sec
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married 1 P 1 QRS, no extras or shortages
30Sinus Arrhythmia
- Rate 60 - 100
- Regularity Irregular
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I 0.12-0.20 sec
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married 1 P 1 QRS, no extras or shortages
31Sinus Tachycardia
- Rate Over 100
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I 0.12-0.20 sec
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married 1 P 1 QRS, no extras or shortages
32Sinus Bradycardia
- Rate Less than 60
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I 0.12-0.20 sec
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married 1 P 1 QRS, no extras or shortages
33Atrial Fibrillation
- Rate Usually tachy
- Regularity Irregular (Irregularly irregular)
- P-Waves Not Discernible
- P-R I Undeterminable
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec
- Married Undeterminable
34Atrial Flutter
- Rate Usually tachy
- Regularity Atria Regular
- Ventricles May be Irregular
- P-Waves Sawtooth Pattern 21, 31, 41...
- P-R I 0.12-0.20 sec on conducting beat
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec
- Married P-waves outnumber QRS
- (Picket fence)
35(Paroxysmal) Supra Ventricular Tach
- Rate 140-220
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves Usually falls within the QRS-T complex
(not visible) - P-R I Shorter than 0.12, or absent
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married Undeterminable
36SVT
- WPW
- Usually based on Hx.
- Delta wave on Q
- Shortened PR-I
- No Verapamil Accessory Path use increase
371st Degree Heart Block
- Rate 60 - 100
- Regularity Very
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I Longer than 0.20 sec
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married 1 P 1 QRS, no extras or shortages
382nd Degree Heart Block (Type 1) Wenkebach
- Rate Can be Normal, or usually brady
- Regularity Irregular
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I Lengthens until beat is dropped
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec and Normal
- Married P-wave present on conducting beats,
increased delay causes missed QRS
392nd Degree Heart Block (Type 2)Mobitz II
- Rate Less than 60
- Regularity Irregular
- P-Waves Present, 21, 31, 41
- P-R I 0.12-0.20 sec on conducting beat
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec, may begin to widen
- Married P-wave for every QRS and extras
depending on conduction ratio
403rd Degree Heart Block (CHB)Complete Heart Block
- Rate Ventricular Rate 40-60
- Regularity Atria-Regular
- Vent-Regular
- P-Waves Present and Normal
- P-R I Atria independent of Ventricles
- QRS Usually greater than 0.12 sec
- Married P-waves completely unrelated to QRS
Complexes.
41Complete Heart Block
42Junctional Rhythm
- Rate 40-60
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves Inverted, Retrograde or Absent
- P-R I Shortened or absent
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec
- Married P-wave for every QRS, sometimes not
visible
43Junctional
44Junctional Accelerated Rhythm
- Rate 60-100
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves Inverted, Retrograde or Absent
- P-R I Shortened or absent
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec
- Married P-wave for every QRS, sometimes not
visible
45Junctional Tachycardia
- Rate 100-140
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves Inverted, Retrograde or Absent
- P-R I Shortened or absent
- QRS 0.04-0.12 sec
- Married P-wave for every QRS, sometimes not
visible
46Ventricular Tachycardia
Well look at Torsades de Pointes in Lab
- Rate 100-220
- Regularity Regular
- P-Waves None
- P-R I None
- QRS Greater than 0.12 sec
- Married NO
47Ventricular Tachycardia
48Ventricular Fibrillation
- Rate No ventricular rate
- Regularity Irregular
- P-Waves No
- P-R I No
- QRS No, unorganized ventricular baseline
- Married No
49Ventricular Fibrillation
50Asystole
- Rate 0
- Regularity N/A
- P-Waves None
- P-R I N/A
- QRS None
- Married No (verify a second lead)
51Asystole
52Agonal / Idioventricular
- Rate 20-40
- Regularity Irregular
- P-Waves None
- P-R I N/A
- QRS Wider than 0.12 sec
- Married NO (a dying heart)
53Idioventricular
54Exceptions / Disruptions
- Premature Ventricular Contractions
- Premature Atrial Contractions
- Bundle Branch Blocks
- Pacer Considerations (Atrial, Ventricular or Both)
55Premature Ventricular Contractions
- Wide, Bizarre QRS Complex
- Always identify the underlying rhythm first
- Can appear in couplets, triplets, short runs of
V-Tach, bigeminy and trigeminy - Can be uni-focal or multi-focal
- Caused by random firing within the ventricles
- Not accompanied by a P-wave
56PVCs
57PACs
- P-QRS Complex appearing in an unexpected location
- Caused by a stimulus from within the Atria, but
not from the SA Node
58PJC
59Bundle Branch Block
- Any rhythm having a BBB will have a widened twin
peaked R-Wave
60Paced Rhythms
- Patients may have various types of pacemakers
- Atrial
- Ventricular
- Both
- Vertical spike on monitor is an indicator
61Paced Rhythms Various
62Artifact
- 60 Cycle Interference
- Loose Leads/Moving Ambulance
63In Summary
- Really Cool Physiology!!!
- GENERAL RULES to Interpretation
- Applicable to 3 lead monitoring
- Practice, Practice, Practice
- Remember the rules, NOT how it looks coming from
one patient or one rhythm generator!!!
64Sources In order of preference
- Many of the pictures and info from
- Flip and See ECG, 2nd Edition
- Cohn/Gilroy-Doohan
- A great resource
- Paramedic Paramedic Textbook, Revised 2nd Edition
- Mick J. Sanders, Mosby
- ECGs Made Easy, 2nd Edition
- Barbara Aehlert, RN, Mosby
- Basic Dysrhythmias, Interpretation and
Management, 3rd Edition - Robert J. Huszar, Mosby