1 / 21

Cardiac Conditions

Cardiac Conditions. Caring for children with cardiac conditions in a community program. 2015-02-12. How the Heart Works. Collects oxygen-poor blood from body and pumps it to the lungs to get oxygen Pumps blood to the lungs and body by a sequence of organized contractions.

vern
Download Presentation

Cardiac Conditions

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. Cardiac Conditions Caring for children with cardiac conditions in a community program 2015-02-12

  2. How the Heart Works • Collects oxygen-poor blood from body and pumps it to the lungs to get oxygen • Pumps blood to the lungs and body by a sequence of organized contractions

  3. Types of cardiac conditions • Congenital heart defects • Slows down or blocks blood flow in the heart or in the blood vessels near the heart • Arrhythmias • Abnormal heart beats • Genetic cardiac conditions • Acquired cardiac conditions • Occurs from infection

  4. Treatment • Medication • Surgery • Heart transplant • Fontan procedure • Pacemaker • Internal Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD)

  5. Activity restrictions • Most children with cardiac conditions can participate in physical activities without restrictions • For some children, competitive or excessively stressful activities may be restricted

  6. Infective Endocarditis • Inflammation caused by an infection in the lining of the heart • Caused by bacteria that gets into blood • Can lead to permanent damage of the heart • May require antibiotics before medical or dental procedure Inform EMS that child has cardiac condition

  7. Congestive Heart Failure • Sweating during quiet time • Persistently rapid/labored breathing • Shortness of breath • Rapid heart rate or irregular heart rate • Chest pain • Nasal flaring • Blueness on or around the mouth, eyes, ears, and/or finger tips • Listlessness (tired and unwilling to do normal activities) • Inability to stop coughing • Skin becomes increasingly pale or blue • Suddenly tired

  8. Responding to Congestive Heart Failure • Have child rest. • If condition doesn’t improve, contact parent/guardian. • If symptoms do not improve and parent/guardian or emergency contact cannot be reached within 5 to 10 minutes, activate 911/EMS. • Place child on the floor in recovery position (lying on left side). • Keep the airway open. Loosen any tight restrictive clothing. • Stay with child until EMS personnel arrive. If the child has noisy gurgled breathing, call 911/EMS.

  9. Loss of consciousness • Call 911/EMS if child does not regain consciousness within one minute. • Implement CPR and the use of an AED, if available. • Notify parent/guardian.

  10. Child specific information • Type of cardiac condition • Activity restrictions • Additional information Health Care Plans are located in child file and binder

  11. Syncope • Temporary loss of consciousness • Passing out or fainting • Usually occurs without warning and often during exercise • Call 911/EMS if child does not regain consciousness within one minute. • Implement CPR and the use of AED, if required. • Notify parent/guardian.

  12. Tachycardia • Heart rate too fast to count • May experience fatigue, dizziness, lightheadedness, chest pain, shortness of breath, upset stomach, weakness • Have the child rest. • If symptoms continue for 20 minutes and parent/guardian or emergencycontact cannot be reached, call 911/EMS. • Stay with child until EMS arrive.

  13. Bradycardia • Slow heart rate • May experience decreased level of activity, weakness, paleness, dizziness • Contact parent/guardian. • If child's condition does not improve in 20 minutes and you are unable to contact parent/guardian or emergency contact, call 911/EMS.

  14. Pacemakers • Battery operated device used to maintain normal heart rhythm • May experience bradycardia and syncope • Some devices may interfere with the function of the defibrillator • Some sports may need to be avoided if they result in a blow to the chest

  15. Internal CardioverterDefibrillator (ICD) If child experiences an internal shock • Put child in recovery position (lying on left side). • Ensure child’s safety. • If child is responsive and received one shock, contact parent/guardian. • If parent/guardian or emergency contact cannot be reached, call 911/EMS. • If child is not responsive or received more than one shock, call 911/EMS.

  16. Internal CardioverterDefibrillator (ICD) • Battery operated device implanted for in chest or abdomen • If ICD is not working and child experiences tachycardia or syncope – call 911/EMS • Some sports may be restricted if they may result in a blow to the chest • Some devices may interfere with the function of the defibrillator

  17. Heart Transplant • Anti-rejection drugs • 5 minute warm up, 5 minute cool down for vigorous exercise • Needs at least 2 litres of water daily • Contact parent if child ill or exposed to communicable disease • Other precautions • Avoid undercooked food • Avoid grapefruit • Avoid dusty areas, smoke • Avoid animals, gardening

  18. Blood thinners External bleeds • Mouth bleeds • Nose bleeds • Surface cuts Internal bleeds • Bruising • Joint & muscle bleeds • Life-threatening bleeds

  19. Surface cutsNose bleedsMouth bleeds Put on gloves. Clean skin. Apply firm continuous pressure until bleeding stops. Apply bandage or dressing. Encourage ice. Call parent/guardian if bleeding does not stop after 20 minutes. If unable to reach parent/guardian or emergency contact, call 911/EMS.

  20. Bruising Notify parent/guardian if bruise is increasing in size. Muscle & Joint Bleeds • Have child rest. • Apply ice to injury. • Elevate injured body part. • Contact parent/guardian. • If unable to contact parent/guardian or emergency contact after 15 minutes, call 911/EMS.

  21. Life-threatening Bleeds If a child has a significant injury to the head, eye, neck, chest or abdomen (with or without signs) Call 911/EMS. Notify parent/guardian.

More Related