Leahs VERY BASIC Cards for Wehner the Weiner Flashcards

1
Q

What is UAT?

A
  • 3+ pre-mature atrial beats of the SAME shape.
  • Pacemaker is present but it is NOT the SA node, so the rate isn’t 60-100. It’s higher.

*NOTE: you can “lose” a P wave within the QRS complex, lose a QRS wave in the case of a block, or see wide QRS waves. However, these are the exceptions and NOT THE RULE.

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2
Q

What is a PAC?

What is its general cause?

A

One or two early beats followed by an abnormal P wave.
Sinus rhythm, meaning the AV node is the pacemaker (= rate of 60-100 BPM)

Can be normal, caused by something simple like caffeine, OR a sign of organic disease. Wide range of causes, not always pathogenic.

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3
Q

What is MAT? How is it any different from PAC? What causes it?

A
  • MAT is kind of like 3+ PACs in a row, but all three with different shapes.
  • MAT has no pacemaker, so the rate is not a normal 60-100 BPM
  • It is always pathogenic.
  • It always has an isoelectric P line.

Caused most generally by pulmonary/cardiac pathologies, or may be observed in sepsis.

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4
Q

What is the difference between PAC, MAT, UAT, and sinus tachycardia with PACs?

A
  1. PAC- 2 or less early P waves of a consistent shape, SA pacemaker
  2. MAT- 3+ early P waves, all DIFFERENT shapes, NO pacemaker.
  3. UAT- 3+ early P waves all of the SAME shape, pacemaker IS NOT the SA node.
  4. Sinus Tach with PACs- 3+ early P waves of the SAME shape with an SA NODE pacemaker.

Note: SA pacemaker = rate of 60-100 BPM

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5
Q

What does it mean if there is a not a QRS wave for every P wave present?

A

This is called a conduction BLOCK.
Describe it as a ratio.
Ex 3:1 means there are 3 P waves for every 1 QRS wave.

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6
Q

What is AFIB?

What causes it?

A

Pattern of ABSENT p waves, constant quivering on the trace (NO baseline), and v rate of 100-180.

It has a very wide range of causes but it is important to note that AFIB is NEVER NORMAL. Most benign causes include post op status, alcohol, and hypertension.

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7
Q

What is atrial flutter? (3)

What causes it?

A
  • “Saw tooth pattern”, loss of isoelectric baseline.
  • Usually Assc with conduction block MEANING there is not a QRS for every P wave. Our homework example was a 4:1 block, meaning there were four P waves for every 1 QRS.
  • Atrial rate of 240-340.

Same pathologies as AFIB, wide range of causes but important to note this is always always pathogenic.

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8
Q

Quick and easy way to distinguish AFIB/FLUTT from MAT or UAT?

A

Is there an isoelectric baseline?
If so, it cannot be A fib or flutter.
Definition of a fib and flutter includes loss of baseline/constant quivering on the trace!!

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9
Q

What is one general difference between atrial arrhythmias and ventricular arrhythmias?

A
  • Atrial arrythmias have THIN/NARROW QRS waves.
  • Ventricular arrythmias have WIDE QRS waves.
  • Note: yes, atrial arrythmias occasionally hVe wide QRS waves during a condition called aberrant conduction, but this is the exception and NOT the rule.
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10
Q
#1 cause of UAT with block?
What might it be mistaken for?
How do you NOT fall for this trap?
A

-UAT with block is caused by digitalis toxicity in 75% of cases

  • It may look a lot like atrial flutter.
  • You will know it is NOT a-flutter because you will be a smart student and notice the ISOELECTIC baseline which is NEVER EVER present in a flutter or a fib!!!!
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11
Q

What is a pre-mature junctional complex? Is it pathologic?

What is a junctional rhythm? Is it pathologic?

A

-early narrow QRS wave w/inverted P waves in II, III, and aVF. (yes, QRS may be wide if there is a block or another complication, but this is not the rule)
-Like PAC, PJC can be normal.
-Junctional rhythm is like several PJCs in a row. HR is 40-60.
P waves are gone or inverted at II, III, and aVF. It is pathologic always.

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13
Q

What’s the difference between a premature junctional complex and a junctional escape rhythm?

A

They’re essentially the same but you call it an “escape beat” if it follows a long pause.

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14
Q

Atrial flutter or atrial fibrillation with a REGULAR R:R interval:

  • common cause?
  • what is happening?
A

Digitalis tox.

The regular R:R rhythm is often actually a full heart block compensated for with a junctional rhythm!

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15
Q

Three EKG patterns that could be caused by digitalis toxicity?

A
  1. A fib or flutter with regular R-R interval.
  2. Junctional rhythm.
  3. UAT with block.
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16
Q

Technically, because Wehner is a Weiner, where could the P wave be in junctional rhythm?

A
  • could be before the QRS, after the QRS or buried/hidden.

- commonly inverted in leads II, III, and aVF.

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17
Q

Hypertrophy:

What does left ventricular hypertrophy look like? Right?

A
  • Left: heart normally depolarizes to the left first, so making this side bigger exaggerates normal findings. Look for huge S waves in V2-3.
  • Right: this will invert normal findings. Look for inverted S waves in I, upright waves in V1.
18
Q

Common EKG finding in hypothermia?

A

AFIB.

19
Q

Three EKG findings Assc with ischemia?

A
  • ST elevation/depression
  • pathologic Q waves
  • t wave inversion.