OSCE - Cardiac Arrest Flashcards

1
Q

Management of the following ECG, no pulse

A

SAFE - shout for help, assess surroundings, free from danger, evaluate
Confirm cardiac arrest
Start CPR 30:2, attach cardiac monitoring and defibrillation pads

SHOCK 120-360 J
2 mins CPR - advanced airway management, assess 4H’s, 4T’s,

Give adrenaline 1 mg IV (IO) after the 3rd shock for adult patients in cardiac arrest with a shockable rhythm.

Repeat adrenaline 1 mg IV (IO) every 3-5 minutes whilst ALS continues.

Give amiodarone 300 mg IV (IO) for adult patients in cardiac arrest who are in VF/pVT after three shocks have been administered.
Give a further dose of amiodarone 150 mg IV (IO) for adult patients in cardiac arrest who are in VF/pVT after five shocks have been administered.

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2
Q

Where can the defibrillation pads be attached?

A

Right upper sternum
5th intercostal space mid-clavicular line

OR

antero-posterior placement - left anterior chest, and behind left scapula
must be > 8cm away from pacemaker devices

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3
Q

Management of atrial fibrillation with life threatening features

A

Sedation/ analgaesia

To convert atrial or ventricular tachyarrhythmias, the shock must be synchronised to occur with the R wave of the electrocardiogram (ECG).

For atrial fibrillation:
An initial synchronised shock at MAX defibrillator output rather than an escalating approach is a reasonable strategy based on current data.

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4
Q

Management Atrial Flutter/ SVT

A

Sedation/ analgaesia

For atrial flutter and paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (140-280 bpm):

Give an initial shock synchronised of 70 - 120 J.

Give subsequent shocks using stepwise increases in energy.

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5
Q

Management of VT with pulse

A

For ventricular tachycardia with a pulse:

Use energy levels of 120-150 J for the initial shock.
Consider stepwise increases if the first shock fails to achieve sinus rhythm.

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6
Q

Management of pulseless VT in cardiac arrest situation

A

DC Shock: 150-360J Biphasic machine

Give adrenaline 1 mg IV (IO) after the 3rd shock for adult patients in cardiac arrest with a shockable rhythm.

Repeat adrenaline 1 mg IV (IO) every 3-5 minutes whilst ALS continues.

Give amiodarone 300 mg IV (IO) for adult patients in cardiac arrest who are in VF/pVT after three shocks have been administered.

Give a further dose of amiodarone 150 mg IV (IO) for adult patients in cardiac arrest who are in VF/pVT after five shocks have been administered.

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7
Q

Management of Bradycardia with life threatening signs

A

ATROPINE 500mcg IV

Others:
Interim measures:
• Atropine 500 mcg IV repeat
to maximum of 3 mg
• Isoprenaline 5 mcg min-1 IV
• Adrenaline 2–10 mcg min-1 IV
• Alternative drugs*

or

Transcutaneous pacing

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8
Q

What rhythms put a patient at risk of asystole and how would you manage them?

A

RISK FACTORS
- Recent asystole
- Mobitz II AV block
- Complete heart block with
broad QRS
- Ventricular pause > 3 s

Manage as per bradycardia algorithm

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9
Q

Management PEA / Asystole

A

SAFE
Confirm cardiac arrest - pulse check 10 seconds
Cardiac monitoring
Defibrillation pads placed
CPR 30:2

Give adrenaline 1 mg IV (IO) as soon as possible for adult patients in cardiac arrest with a non-shockable rhythm.

Give adrenaline 1 mg IV after every alternate sequence of CPR/rhythm check (approximately every 3–5 minutes).
Rule out 4H’S, 4T’s

Continue CPR (30:2) until the airway is secured — once the airway is secured, ventilate the lungs at a rate of about 10 breaths per minute and continue chest compressions without pausing during ventilation.

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10
Q

What is Wolf Parkinson White Syndrome?

A

WPW Syndrome refers to the presence of a congenital accessory pathway (AP) and episodes of tachyarrhythmias. The term is often used interchangeablely with pre-excitation syndrome.

Associated with a small increase in risk of sudden cardiac death.

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11
Q

ECG features of WPW?

A
  1. PR interval < 120ms (SHORT)
  2. Delta wave: slurring slow rise of initial portion of the QRS
  3. QRS prolongation > 110ms (WIDE)
  4. Discordant ST-segment and T-wave changes (i.e. in the opposite direction to the major component of the QRS complex)
  5. Pseudo-infarction pattern in up to 70% of patients — due to negatively deflected delta waves in inferior/anterior leads (“pseudo-Q waves”), or prominent R waves in V1-3 (mimicking posterior infarction)
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12
Q

What type of tachyarrhythmias occur in WPW syndrome?

A
  1. Atrial fibrillation or flutter. Due to direct conduction from atria to ventricles via an AP, bypassing the AV node.
  2. Atrioventricular re-entry tachycardia (AVRT). Due to formation of a re-entry circuit involving the AP.
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