photos Flashcards

1
Q

What is this

A

NSR

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2
Q

Whats going on

A

Sinus pause AKA arrest

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3
Q

whats going on

A

SA block

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4
Q

What’s going on

A

PAC

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5
Q

what’s going on

A

Ectopic Atrial Tachycardia (atrial foci)

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6
Q

What’s going on here

A

WAP wondering atrial pacemaker (the origin of the electrical charge is mocing around)

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7
Q

What’s going on

A

Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia

This one is just like the WAP but also has an increased HR

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8
Q

Whats going on

A

atrial flutter rate 250+

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9
Q

Whats going on

A

A fib

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10
Q

whats going on

A

Premature junctional contaction

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11
Q

whats going on

A

Junctional escape beat

The SA does not do what it’ supposed to do so another area takes over.

This is when a lower area of function becomes active because the higher areas are not doing what they should

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12
Q

Whats going on

A

Junctional Rhythm

This means the AV node is teh pacemaker

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13
Q

What’s going on

A

Accelerated junctional Rhythym

conduction starting in ventricles with no P waves noted (faster than 20-40)

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14
Q

What’s going on

A

PVC

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15
Q

What is going on

A

Idioventricular Rhythm

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16
Q

What’s going on

A

A fib

17
Q

What’s going on

A

Escape vs PVC: the escape will be a longer R-R and the PVC will be shorter

18
Q

Junctional Rhythym means it’s coming from where

A

AV node (40-60)

19
Q

cue that the beat is idio ventricular

A

There is no P wave 20- 40 BPM unless it’s accelerated

20
Q

What’s going on

A

Accelerated Idioventricular Rhythm

21
Q

What’s going on

A

V-tach

22
Q

What’s going on

A

VTach – Fusion and Captured Beats

23
Q

What’s going on

A

Torsade de Pointes

24
Q

What’s going on

A

Ventricular Flutter

25
Q

What’s going on

A

V- Fib

26
Q

What’s going on

A

NSR

27
Q

What’s going on

A

SA pause / arrest (longer than one beat) no big deal if < 2 seconds

SA Node fails to initiate an impulse

28
Q

What’s going on

A

Sinoatrial (SA) Block

SA node initiates an impulse but the electrical activity is blocked from leaving the SA node resulting in the absence of P wave, QRS complex, and T wave.

29
Q

what’s going on

A

(1st degree block increased PR)

First degree heart block demonstrates a long PR interval. This occurs because the delay through the AV node is too long due to slow conduction in the AV node. The remaining electrical system functions normally. All the P waves are conducted and are associated with a QRS complex.

30
Q

Whats going on

A

2nd Degree AV Block – Mobitz I (Wenckebach)

“longer longer longer drop, low you have a Wenckebach”

In type I (Wenckebach), the PR interval increases with each heart beat until it is so long that the signal doesn’t reach the ventricles and the depolarization is “blocked” at the AV node. This beat will show a P wave with no QRS following it. Following the blocked (dropped) beat, the AV node starts again with a normal or near normal PR interval and the cycle repeats itself.

31
Q

What’s going on

A

2nd Degree AV Block –Mobitz II

In type II, P waves are randomly blocked just below the AV node. The PR interval is constant, which contrasts with the type I block.

32
Q

Whats going on

A

3rd degree heart block

If the QRS is narrow it originaes near the AV node it wil be narrow. If it’s wide it’s close to PRS.

Complete block of the AV node, Atria are paced by SA node, but impulse is blocked to ventricles.

Atria are pacing normally but the signals do not make it to ventricles thus you see P waves NOT associated with ventricular escape beats (wide QRS)

In third degree block, no P waves are conducted to the ventricles. The SA node generates atrial contractions and P waves. The P waves are 100% unrelated to the QRS’s. Because the ventricles are not being depolarized, an ectopic site within ventricular muscle becomes the new ventricular pacemaker. The ventricular rate is determined by the ventricular ectopic site while the atrial rate is determined by the sinus node. The ventricular beats do not travel retrograde through the AV. The atrial rate is usually faster than the ventricular rate.

Understand that both areas of the heart will be pacing REGULARLY, but at their own rates.

33
Q

good review

A

just a good review

34
Q

If the R is far from P

then you have a first degree

longer, longer, longer, drop!

then you have Wenckebach

if some P’s just don’t go through

then you have a Mobitz II

if P’s and Q’s just don’t agree

then you have a third degree

A
35
Q

Normal Sinus Rhythm (NSR)

Rate

60 – 100 bpm

Rhythm

Regular

P waves

Upright, all the same, 1 P for every QRS

PR interval

3-5 little squares (0.12 – 0.20 seconds), constant

QRS complex

< 3 little squares (0.12 seconds)

A
36
Q

What’s going on

A

Wolf Parkinson White

This is asscoated with a delta wave (see how the beginning of the QRS is curved) This is because some of the signal is getting around the AV node and causing slightly early Ventricle deporlaization.

37
Q
A