1 / 18

In Summary….

In Summary…. Understand?. Could you label this???. ECG Paper. ECG Paper and Standardization. Standardization Signal Without a standardization signal, the ECG paper is merely graph paper. By entering a signal, you place value on each of the smallest squares.

kayo
Download Presentation

In Summary….

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. In Summary….

  2. Understand?

  3. Could you label this???

  4. ECG Paper

  5. ECG Paper and Standardization • Standardization Signal • Without a standardization signal, the ECG paper is merely graph paper. By entering a signal, you place value on each of the smallest squares. • At 1 cm=1 mv each tiny square represents 0.1 mv in height (amplitude) and 0.02 seconds in width (duration) at a paper speed of 50 mm/sec. • At a paper speed of 25 mm/sec, each tiny square represents 0.04 seconds, every large box (5 small boxes) represents 0.20 seconds, and every 15 large boxes (set) = 3 seconds. • The calibration signal can be changed, if necessary, to affect amplitude only.

  6. Baseline or Isoelectric Line Positive charges Negative charges

  7. Normal ECG Tracing

  8. Common Technical Pitfalls • Incorrect lead placement • Paper speed • Motion artifacts • Breathing/respiratory movement • Purring

  9. Artifacts • The word artifact is similar to artificial in the sense that it is often used to indicate something that is not natural (i.e. man-made).  In electrocardiography, an ECG artifact is used to indicate something that is not "heart-made."  These include (but are not limited to) electrical interference by outside sources, electrical noise from elsewhere in the body, poor contact, and machine malfunction.  Artifacts are extremely common, and knowledge of them is necessary to prevent misinterpretation of a heart's rhythm  

  10. Muscle Tremor Interference • If your patient is not calm and comfortable, or just really nervous and shaky…the reading may look like this. Also caused by happy, purring feline patients • Reapplying or readjusting the clips may help • A towel or blanket can be placed on patient to help calm them • You can also place your hand on the chest of the patient, taking care not to apply too much pressure (will interfere with reading)

  11. Patient Movements

  12. Electrical Interference • Remember that rubber mat and how you checked your machine for causes of bad ground? • Interference can be caused by other machinery such as a pulse oximeter or BP monitor that is hooked up to animal; even fluorescent lighting

  13. Loose Electrodes

  14. ECG Tracings of Common Arrhythmias • Please refer to your ECG handout • Reading assignment VTDRG: Pg 205-220, 338-345

  15. Classification of Arrhythmias • Definition • An abnormality in the rate, regularity, or site of origin of the cardiac impulse • A disturbance in conduction of the impulse such that the normal sequence of activation of the atria and ventricles is altered

  16. Classification of Arrhythmias • Normal sinus impulse formation • Normal sinus rhythm • Sinus arrhythmia • Disturbances of sinus impulse formation • Sinus bradycardia • Sinus tachycardia • Disturbances of supraventricular impulse formation • Atrial premature complexes • Atrial tachycardia • Atrial flutter • Atrial fibrillation

  17. Disturbances of ventricular impulse formation • Ventricular premature complexes • Ventricular tachycardia • Ventricular systole • Ventricular asystole • Ventricular fibrillation Disturbances of impulse conduction • Sinus arrest or block • Atrial standstill • Ventricular pre-excitation • First-degree AV block • Second degree AV block • Third degree AV block • Left bundle branch block • Right bundle branch block

  18. Building Blocks for Arrythymia Interpretation • Recognize the site of origin of the abnormal beat • Recognize deviations from the normal rate of automaticity for that site • Site of Origin • Atrial • Positive deflection P waves are present with a constant P-R interval and normal duration QRS complex • Junctional • Negative deflection P waves, or no P waves with a normally conducted short QRS complex • Ventricular • No P waves are evident, QRS complexes are wide and bizarre appearing and may be positive or negative polarity depending on which ventricle is the site of origin

More Related