January 7, 2016 - Introduction to Electrocardiography Flashcards

1
Q

Action Potential Graph

A
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2
Q

Lead 1

A

Left to Right

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3
Q

Lead 2

A

Downwards to the right

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4
Q

Lead 3

A

Downward to the left

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5
Q

Lead aVF

A

Top to bottom

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6
Q

Lead aVR

A

Towards the right arm

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7
Q

Lead aVL

A

Towards the left arm

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8
Q

Einthoven’s Triangle

A

The sum of all the leads will be zero

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9
Q

Precordial Leads

A

V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, and V6

Placed from near the sternum, around the heart, to under the left armpit.

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10
Q

Leads and “Planes”

A

The limb leads cannot measure front and back (they only measure coronal plane)

The precordial leads cannot measure head to toe (they only measure transverse plane)

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11
Q

P-wave

A

Marks atrial depolarization.

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12
Q

QRS Complex

A

Marks ventricular depolarization

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13
Q

T-wave

A

Marks ventricular repolarization.

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14
Q

PR Interval

A

Marks atrial depolarization and transmission through the AV node

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15
Q

QT Interval

A

Starts at the beginning of ventricular depolarization, includes ventricular contraction (mechanical not electrical), and to the end of ventricular repolarization.

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16
Q

The 5-step approach to analyzing ECGs.

A
  1. Rate
  2. Rhythym
  3. P-waves
  4. PR interval
  5. QRS
17
Q

Rate on ECG

A

Calculated by dividing 300 by the number of big squares between beats.

Normal is 60-100, bradycardia is <60, and tachycardia is >100.

18
Q

Rhythm on ECGs

A

There are four types of rhythm:

  1. Regular
  2. Irregular with a pattern
  3. Irregular with no pattern
  4. Regular with miss or extra
19
Q

P-Waves on ECGs

A

Ask yourself…

  1. Are P-waves present?
  2. Are they the same shape and size?
  3. Are there more or fewer P-waves than QRS complexes?
  4. Do the P-waves create QRS complexes?
20
Q

PR Interval on ECGs

A

Ask yourself…

1. Is the PR interval short, normal, or long?

Short is defined as less than 3 little squares, normal is 3-5 little squares, and long is more than 5 little squares.

2. Does the PR interval change or is it constant?

21
Q

QRS Complex on ECGs

A

Ask yourself if the width of the QRS complex is narrow (normal) or wide?

Normal QRS is less than 3 little squares