1 / 59

DYSRHYTHMIAS

DYSRHYTHMIAS. NUR – 224 MS. GARDNER. DYSRHYTHMIAS. Disorder of conduction of the electrical impulse within the heart. Cause disturbances with heart rate/heart rhythm or both. Diagnosed by analyzing the electrocardiographic (ECG/EKG). Treatment based on frequency and severity of symptoms

amaris
Download Presentation

DYSRHYTHMIAS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DYSRHYTHMIAS NUR – 224 MS. GARDNER

  2. DYSRHYTHMIAS • Disorder of conduction of the electrical impulse within the heart. • Cause disturbances with heart rate/heart rhythm or both. • Diagnosed by analyzing the electrocardiographic (ECG/EKG). • Treatment based on frequency and severity of symptoms • Named according to the site of origin of the impulse and the conduction involved.

  3. Normal Electrical Conduction • Electrical impulse stimulates and paces the cardiac muscle and normally originates in the SA node. • Rate 60-100 bpm • All beats appear in a similar pattern, equally spaced, and have three major units: P wave, QRS complex, and T wave.

  4. Heart/ECG • Each wave represents transmission of an electrical impulse through the heart muscle (depolarization)  causes the muscle to contract and eject blood. • P wave – reflects impulse going through the atria. • QRS complex - reflects impulse going through the ventricles. • T wave - is produced by the electrical recovery (repolarization) of the ventricle. • Depolarization – electrical stimulation/contraction • Repolarization – electrical relaxation

  5. Normal Electric Pathway • Electrical impulse originates in the sinoatrial (SA) node. • The impulse spreads through the intra-atrial pathways to the atrio-ventricular(AV) node. • The structure of the AV node slows the electrical impulse  giving the atria time to contract and fill ventricles with blood. (atrial kick) • After a brief delay, the impulse continues through the bundle of His, the R/L bundle branches, Purkinje fibers located in the ventricular muscle. • This stimulation causes the ventricles to contract (systole) • The heart rate is influenced by the autonomic nervous system  sympathetic/parasympathetic nerve fibers

  6. Electrocardiogram • Electrical impulse travels through the heart  the end product is an ECG. • ECG is obtained by placing electrodes on the body – on the limbs and chest. • The electrodes create an imaginary line  lead. Waveforms that appear on the paper/cardiac monitor represent the electrical current in relation to the lead. • Electrodes are attached to a cable wire which may be connected to ECG machine, cardiac monitor, telemetry monitor, Holter monitoring. • 12-lead ECG  10 electrodes, reflects the activity in the left ventricle.

  7. Interpretation • ECG waveforms are printed on graph paper that is divided by light and dark vertical and horizontal lines. • ECG waveform moves to the top of the paper  positive deflection • ECG moves toward the bottom of the paper  negative deflection • Each waveform should be compared and examined with others.

  8. Interpretation • ECG – composed of waveforms (P wave, QRS complex, T wave) P wave – • first upward deflection represents atrial depolarization. usually not more than 3 small blocks. QRS complex – • ventricular depolarization. • consist of three deflections: Q wave, the first downward stroke, R wave first upward stroke; S wave downward stroke following the R wave. • normal duration of the QRS complex is less than three small blocks (0.12 seconds).

  9. Interpretation T wave • represents ventricular repolarization/electrical recovery of the ventricular contraction. PR interval • measures from the beginning of the P wave to the onset of the Q wave. • represents conduction of the impulse through the atria and into the AV node. ST segment • begins at the end of the S wave and ends at the beginning of the T wave. U wave Small upward deflection following the T wave. Seldom present.

  10. Interpretation PP interval • measured from one P wave to the beginning to the next P wave • used to determine atrial rhythm and atrial rate RR interval • measured from one QRS complex to the next QRS complex. • RR interval used to determine ventricular rate and rhythm.

  11. Analyzing the Rhythm Strip • Count the number of complexes in a 6 –second strip and multiply that number by 10. (useful for irregular rhythms) Analyze in a systematic manner: • Rhythm – regular • Rate – 60-100 beats/minute • P wave – present and upright /all shaped alike • PR interval - P wave precedes QRS duration (0.12 -0.20 sec.) time interval same for all beats • QRS interval – present /all shaped alike duration not more than 3 small squares (0.12 sec.)

  12. Normal Sinus Rhythm • Rhythm – regular • Rate – 60-100 beats/minute • P wave – present and upright /all shaped alike • PR interval - P wave precedes QRS • duration (0.12 -0.20 sec.) • time interval same for all beats • QRS interval – present /all shaped alike • duration not more than 3 small squares • (0.12 sec.)

  13. Sinus Bradycardia • Dysrhythmias heart rate below 60, complex remain normal • Causes: sleep, athletic training, hypothyroidism, medications, myocardial infarction • Atropine IV medication of choice for treatment bradycardia

  14. Sinus Tachycardia • All complexes are normal. The heart rate is more than100. • Causes: Physiologic stress Medication • Treatment: usually secondary to factors outside the heart, treatment is directed to treat the underlying cause

  15. Sinus Arrhythmia • All complexes are normal, but the heart rate is irregular. • The rate increases with inspiration and decreases with expiration • Does not cause any significant hemodynamic effect and usually is not treated

  16. Atrial Dysrhythmias • Portions of atrial tissue may become excitable and initiate impulses. • These impulses will control the heartbeat if they occur at a rate faster than impulses from the SA node. • Premature atrial complex • Atrial flutter • Atrial fibrillation

  17. Premature Atrial Complex • A single complex beat that occurs when an electrical impulse appears early in the cycle – before the next sinus beat. • Cause: caffeine, nicotine, anxiety, hypokalemia • PACs are common normal heartbeats • If infrequent - no treatment is necessary.

  18. Atrial Flutter • Is a rapid, regular fluttering of the atrium. • The atrial rate is between 250/400 times/minute. • P wave takes on a saw toothed appearance • Cause: open heart surgery, valvular disease • Treatment: Adenosine, vagal maneuvers, electrical cardioversion, medications, catheter ablation

  19. Atrial Fibrillation • Uncoordinated atrial electrical activity that causes a rapid disorganization and uncoordinated twitching of the atria • P waves – (fibrillatory waves) assume different shapes because they are coming from different foci in the atrium. • No PR interval can be determined • Cause: CAD, open heart surgery, obesity, diabetes • Treatment:

  20. Ventricular Dysrhythmias • Ventricular tissue becomes more excitable as a result of ischemia, drug effect or electrolyte imbalance. These dysrhythmias may diminish the ability of the heart to function as a pump. • Without adequate blood flow, all organs deteriorate. • Premature ventricular complex • Ventricular tachycardia • Ventricular fibrillation • Ventricular asystole

  21. Premature Ventricular Complex • Impulse that starts in the ventricles and is conducted throughout the ventricle before the next normal sinus impulse. • Can occur in healthy people  coffee, smoking, alcohol. • PVCs are usually not serious • Treatment: correct the underlying cause, if PVCs are frequent and consistent  amiodarone/lidocaine • Bigeminy, trigeminy, multifocal

  22. Multifocal PVC - Quadrigeminy

  23. Ventricular Tachycardia • Three or more PVCs in a row, rate exceeds 100 bpm. • Is an emergency the patient is usually unresponsive and pulseless, leads to reduce cardiac output. • Treatment: antiarrhythmic medication, pacing, or cardioversion • If patient is unconscious and without a pulse immediate defibrillation

  24. Ventricular Fibrillation • Most common dysrhythmia in patients with cardiac arrest • Rapid, disorganized ventricular rhythm that cause ineffective quivering of the ventricles • No atrial activity is seen on ECG • Characterized by: absence of an audible heartbeat, a palpable pulse, and respirations • There is no coordinated cardiac activity  cardiac arrest and death are imminent if the dysrhythmia is not corrected • Defibrillation/cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)

  25. Ventricular Asystole

  26. Ventricular Asystole • Flatline, • No QRS complex • P waves may be apparent for a short duration • There is no heartbeat, no palpable pulse, and no respiration • Without immediately treatment – fatal • Treatment – CPR, intubation, IV access

  27. Assessment • Cardiac dysrhythmias – either begin/critical • Diagnostic Test electrocardiogram cardiac monitoring electrophysiology

  28. Nursing Interventions • Monitoring/ECG monitoring • Administration of medications/medication effects • Adjunct therapy: cardioversion, defibrillation, pacemakers • Other

  29. Adjunctive Modalities • Medications not working • Common therapies: elective cardioversion defibrillation implantable devices internal cardio defibrillators

  30. Pacemakers • Is a pulse generator used to provide an electrical stimulus to the heart when the heart fails to generate/conduct its own rate that maintains cardiac output. • Are programmed to stimulate the atria or the ventricles, or both • Pacing is detected on the ECG strip by the presence of pacing artifact – a sharp spike is noted • Power source may be internal/external • Several different types: Temporary Permanent

  31. Pacemaker • Paces the heart when normal conduction pathway is damaged. • Basic unit – power source, one or more conducting leads • The electrical signal travels from the pacemaker, through the leads, the walls of the myocardium. • The myocardium is “captured” and stimulated to contract

  32. Pacemaker • Permanent • Implanted totally within the body • The power source is placed subcutaneously, usually over the pectoral muscle on the patient’s nondominant side • The pacing leads are leads are threaded transvenously to right atrium and one/both ventricles and attached to the power source.

  33. Pacemakers • Temporary • Power source is outside the body • Different types Epicardial pacing Transvenous pacing Transcutaneous pacing

  34. Epicardial pacing

  35. Pacing on Demand

  36. Pacemaker Patient teaching • Follow-up care • Report s/s infection • Keep incision dry • Avoid lifting arm on pacemaker site • Airport travel is not restricted • Carry pacemaker information card • Wear Medic-alert ID band

  37. Cardioversion and Defibrillation • Treat tachy dysrhythmias by delivering electrical current that depolarizes myocardial cells • When cells repolarize, sinus node usually able to recapture role as heart pacemaker • Cardioversion current delivered is synchronized with patient’s ECG • Defibrillation current delivered is unsynchronized and immediate

  38. Paddle placement

  39. Cardioversion • A synchronized circuit in the defibrillator delivers a direct electrical current synchronized with the patient’s heart rhythm. • Countershock that is programmed to occur with the R wave of the QRS complex. • Used for nonemergency basis – • Used to treat – atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, stable ventricular tachycardia • Patient is awake/hemodynamically stable • Sedation prior to the procedure • Patent airway • Initial energy less than what is needed for defibrillation – 50 – 100 joules

  40. Defibrillation • Choice of treatment of choice to terminate VF/pulseless VT. • Defibrillation is accomplished by delivering direct current without regard to the cardiac cycle. • The output of the defibrillator is measured in joules/watts – 200 -360 joules • If defibrillation is unsuccessful, CPR is immediately initiated • Defibrillation, CPR, medication administration continues until a stable rhythm resumes or until it is established that the patient will not recover.

More Related