Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Advanced Cardiac Life Support

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Advanced Cardiac Life Support"— Presentation transcript:

1 Advanced Cardiac Life Support
ECG Interpretation Advanced Cardiac Life Support William A. Shapiro, M.D. advancing health worldwide TM Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care

2 Course Objectives & Description:
Recognize & initiate early management of peri-arrest conditions that may result in cardiac arrest Manage cardiac arrest until return of spontaneous circulation, or transfer of care Understanding of arrhythmia interpretation Recognize the hemodynamic consequences of arrhythmias How do you become good at running codes, saving lives, leading people? Watching tv doctor shows? Reading books? Who are your role models when you watch codes? And who are the people you do want to be like? Reflect on each and every code, make the next one better, ask questions, and always be willing to ask for help.

3 Normal Sinus Rhythm Normal sinus rhythm results from the initiation of an electrical signal (the cardiac impulse) by cells of the sinus node at a rate appropriate to the age and state of activity of the individual, and then the propagation of that signal in an orderly manner through the atria, A-V junction, ventricular specialized conducting system and the ventricular myocardium There’s no number here

4 Cardiac Conduction System
Bachmann’s bundle Sinus node Internodal pathways Left bundle branch AV node Bundle of His Posterior division Anterior division Purkinje fibers Right bundle branch

5 Arrhythmia An arrhythmia reflects either abnormally rapid or slow impulse initiation by the sinus node, or interruption of the sinus rhythm by impulses originating from some other site in the heart, either for short or long periods of time Define abnormal in terms of what deviates from the expected.

6 Mechanisms of Arrhythmias
Reentry Automaticity Altered normal automaticity Abnormal automaticity Triggered Rhythms due to DAD (delayed after depolarizations At the bedside, watching a patient die is not the time to ponder the latest theories in the mechanisms of arrhythmia. This is the time to do the best you can do to restore cardiac rhythm and save a life.

7 Causes of Arrhythmias Physiologic and Pathologic Processes
Vagal stimulation, Fever, Hypothermia Electrolyte abnormalities, CNS problems Hypovolemia, Pain, anaphylaxis, etc. Preexisting Cardiac & Pulmonary Disease Acute coronary syndrome, HTN, AODM COPD, hypoxia, hypercarbia These are the things to think about. What’s going on with this patient, at this time, right now.

8 The Electrocardiogram

9 The Electrocardiogram
P T U Q S PR Interval QRS Interval

10 The Electrocardiogram
PR Interval QRS Interval QT Interval

11 Cardiac Conduction System
Relationship of ECG to anatomy

12 Cardiac Conduction System
Relationship of ECG to anatomy

13 ACLS IN THE ACLS PROVIDER IS:
Today, we have time to reflect on some of the ecg rhythms for the scenarios you are learning. We’re all in this together. Our little helpers. If they don’t know an answer, come to me. If I don’t know, I go to the EP people. They always know. IN

14 Normal Sinus Rhythm Rate 60-100 beats per minute Rhythm: Regular
P waves: Upright in Leads: 1, 2, AVF

15 Determining the Rate ECG paper has 3/6 second marks. Also, the machine reads the rate. The real problem is with unstable, or irregular rhythms. For those, count the number of beats in a minute.

16 Determining the Rate

17 Determining the Rhythm

18 Sinus Tachycardia Rate: Greater than 100 beats per minute
Rhythm: Regular P waves: Upright in Leads: 1, 2, AVF

19 Sinus Tachycardia Rate: Greater than 100 beats per minute
Rhythm: Regular P waves: Upright in Leads: 1, 2, AVF

20 Sinus Bradycardia Rate: Less than 60 beats per minute Rhythm: Regular
P waves: Upright in Leads: 1, 2, AVF

21 Sinus Bradycardia Rate: Less than 60 beats per minute Rhythm: Regular
P waves: Upright in Leads: 1, 2, AVF

22 Premature Atrial Complexes
P wave Rhythm: Irregular P waves: Premature, often in the T-wave QRS complex: Normal or widened P-wave

23 Premature Atrial Complexes
P wave Rhythm: Irregular P waves: Premature, often in the T-wave QRS complex: Normal or widened

24 Premature Atrial Complexes
P wave Rhythm: Irregular P waves: Premature, often in the T-wave QRS complex: (Normal or widened) or blocked Non conducted P-wave

25 Atrial Tachycardia Rate: Atrial- 140-240 bpm, p-waves hard to see
Rhythm: P-wave- regular QRS- 1-1 conduction with atrial rates < 200 bpm With atrial rates > 200 bpm, A-V conduction block common (less than 1-1 conduction) PR interval- depends on the origin of the p-wave QRS- usually normal

26 Atrial Tachycardia P-Wave P-Wave

27 Atrial Tachycardia Atrial Tachycardia with variable block
P-Waves are regular at 160 bpm

28 Atrial Flutter Rate: Atrial- 300 bpm (260-320) Rhythm:
P-waves- regular QRS- 2-1 conduction bpm, variable AV conduction with constant AV conduction ratio P-waves: F-waves (Flutter), sawtooth pattern QRS- usually normal, obviously sometimes wide

29 Atrial Flutter F-waves

30 Atrial Flutter with variable conduction (block)

31 Atrial Fibrillation Rate: Atrial- rapid, Ventricular- Depends Rhythm:
P-waves- irregular QRS- beat to beat variability, Irregularly irregular P-waves: From F-waves (Flutter) to absent QRS duration- normal or wide

32 Atrial Fibrillation

33 Atrial Fibrillation

34 Atrial Fibrillation

35 Premature Junctional Complexes
Rhythm: Irregular P waves: Retrograde PR interval: < .12 sec or nonexistent QRS complex: Normal or widened

36 Premature Ventricular Complexes
Rhythm: Irregular P waves: Usually not seen QRS complex: Wide > .12 sec Compensatory pause

37 Premature Ventricular Complexes
Compensatory pause This distance is double the sinus distance This is the sinus and the QRS distance Resetting versus non resetting of the sinus node.

38 Premature Ventricular Complexes
Unifocal PVCs Multifocal PVCs

39 Premature Ventricular Complexes
Compensatory pause This distance is double the sinus distance This is the sinus and the QRS distance Interpolated PVC

40 Premature Ventricular Complexes
Ventricular Bigeminy Pairs of PVCs

41 Premature Ventricular Complexes
PVC on T-wave precipitating Ventricular Tachycardia

42 Ventricular Tachycardia
Rate: Approx bpm Rhythm: Usually regular P waves: Usually not seen Independent A and V activity A-V dissociation QRS complex: Wide > .12 sec Capture beats, fusion beats

43 Ventricular Tachycardia

44 Ventricular Tachycardia
Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia

45 Ventricular Fibrillation
Rate: Rapid- no effective cardiac rhythm Rhythm: Irregular P, QRS, T- waves: Absent No blood pressure!

46 Ventricular Fibrillation
Course VF Fine VF

47 Ventricular Fibrillation

48 Ventricular Asystole P, QRS, T- waves: Complete absent of cardiac electrical activity Complete absent of effective cardiac pumping function

49 Acute Coronary Syndromes

50 Acute Coronary Syndromes

51 Acute Coronary Syndromes

52 Review

53 Review Atrial Fibrillation

54 Review Atrial Fibrillation Sinus Rhythm

55 Acute Coronary Syndrome
Review Atrial Fibrillation Sinus Rhythm Acute Coronary Syndrome

56 Review

57 Review Asystole

58 Fine Ventricular Fibrillation
Review Asystole Fine Ventricular Fibrillation

59 Review Asystole Fine Ventricular Fibrillation
Coarse Ventricular Fibrillation

60 Review

61 Ventricular Tachycardia- ?
Review Ventricular Tachycardia- ?

62 Review Ventricular Tachycardia- ? Premature Ventricular Complex (PVC)

63 Review Ventricular Tachycardia- ? Premature Ventricular Complex (PVC)

64 Review

65 Ventricular Tachycardia
Review Ventricular Tachycardia

66 Review Ventricular Tachycardia Ventricular Tachycardia

67 Review Ventricular Tachycardia Ventricular Tachycardia
(Paroxsymal) Atrial Tachycardia (SVT)

68 Review

69 Paroxsymal Atrial Tachycardia (SVT)
Review Paroxsymal Atrial Tachycardia (SVT)

70 Paroxsymal Atrial Tachycardia (SVT)
Review Paroxsymal Atrial Tachycardia (SVT) Atrial Flutter

71 Treatment of All Cardiac Arrhythmias
All arrhythmias that are hemodynamically significant require immediate cardioversion, defibrillation, or cardiac pacing

72 Break Time

73 AV Block Why is it important? Where is the block?
What’s a pacemaker anyway?

74 Rates of Intrinsic Cardiac Pacemakers
Primary pacemaker Sinus node ( bpm) Escape pacemakers AV junction (40-60 bpm) Ventricular (< 40 bpm)

75 Escape Patterns

76 Junctional Escape Complexes
Rate: Junctional escape rate bpm Rhythm: Junctional P-waves: Retrograde, inverted in 2,3, avf Before, during, or after QRS QRS: Normal or wide

77 Junctional Escape Complexes

78 Junctional Escape Complexes
Junctional Rhythm

79 Ventricular Escape Complexes

80 Classification of AV Block
Partial First-degree AV block Second-degree AV block, Types I (Wenckebach) and Type II Complete AV block Third-degree AV Block “You should know the major AV blocks because important treatment decisions are based on the type of block present.” Page 79

81 First-Degree AV Block Rhythm: Regular
1:1 Conduction: Each P-wave is followed by a QRS complex PR Interval: > .20 secs QRS Complex: Generally normal Hemodynamic implications: None

82 First-Degree AV Block

83 Second-Degree AV Block, Type I
Rate: Atrial- regular Ventricular- less than the atrial rate Rhythm: Ventricular- progressive shortening of the R-R interval before pause PR: progressive increase until P blocked Why is knowing this important

84 Second-Degree AV Block, Type I

85 Second-Degree AV Block, Type II
Rate: Atrial- regular Ventricular- less than the atrial rate Rhythm: Ventricular- usually irregular PR: constant when present Why is knowing this important

86 Second-Degree AV Block, Type II

87 Third-Degree AV Block Rate: Atrial- regular
Ventricular- less than the atrial rate Rhythm: Ventricular- regular PR: varies with every beat QRS: normal or wide Hemodynamics: No atrial contribution

88 Third-Degree AV Block

89 Third-Degree AV Block

90 Electrical Therapy All arrhythmias that are hemodynamically significant require immediate cardioversion, defibrillation, or cardiac pacing

91 Electrical Therapy Understand when cardioversion or defibrillation is indicated Know the difference between unsynchronized and synchronized shocks Energy doses for specific rhythms Challenges of delivering shocks safely and effectively- may include iv sedation

92 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Understand when cardioversion or defibrillation is indicated SYMPTOMS SYMPTOMS SYMPTOMS

93 Hemodynamically Significant
Tachycardia or Bradycardia Hypotension (Systolic BP < 80 mmHg) Altered mental status Congestive heart failure Angina Does not respond promptly to medical management, if tried

94 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
The electric shock depolarizes all excitable myocardium, interrupts reentrant circuits, discharges foci, and establishes electrical homogeneity

95 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
AED: Learn the one in your setting Biphasic: 200 watt-seconds (joules) Monophasic: 360 watt-seconds (joules) “The interval from collapse to defibrillation is one of the most important determinants of survival from cardiac arrest.” Page 35

96 Cardioversion and Defibrillation

97 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Procedure for Defibrillation Power on Apply pads Analyze the rhythm Select the energy level Clear the area Discharge the device

98 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Know when cardioversion is indicated Synchronized vs unsynchronized shock What energy level for what arrhythmias Establish iv and consider sedation

99 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Anesthetic (amnestic) Agents A physician skilled in airway management (ie., an anesthesiologist) should be in attendance, and all necessary equipment for emergency resuscitation should be immediately available

100 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
The electric shock depolarizes all excitable myocardium, interrupts reentrant circuits, discharges foci, and establishes electrical homogeneity

101 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Synchronization Synchronized cardioversion (defibrillation) uses a sensor to deliver the shock with the peak of the QRS complex. The goal is to avoid the shock on the T-wave, “R-on-T”, which is known to induce ventricular fibrillation in unstable hearts

102 The Electrocardiogram
PR Interval QRS Interval QT Interval

103 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Synchronization Energy Selection Atrial flutter & SVT: J (monphasic) Atrial fibrillation: J (monophasic) Ventricular tachycardia: J

104 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Procedure for Cardioversion Power on Apply pads Turn on the SYNC control Analyze the rhythm Select the energy level Clear the area Discharge the device

105 Cardioversion and Defibrillation
Complications of Cardioversion Ventricular fibrillation occurs Turn off the SYNC control Charge to 200 J (or more) Clear the area Discharge the device

106 Review

107 Review 3rd Degree Heart Block

108 Review 3rd Degree Heart Block 2nd Degree Type II Block

109 Review 3rd Degree Heart Block 2nd Degree Type II Block
2nd Degree Type I Block

110 Review

111 Review 1st Degree Heart Block

112 Junctional Escape Rhythm
Review 1st Degree Heart Block Junctional Escape Rhythm

113 Review 1st Degree Heart Block Junctional Escape Rhythm
Sinus Bradycardia

114 Ventricular Tachycardia- ?
Review Ventricular Tachycardia- ?

115

116 Advanced Cardiac Life Support
ECG Interpretation Advanced Cardiac Life Support That’s it- Now go forth and save lives- Make us all proud you’re from UCSF William A. Shapiro, M.D. advancing health worldwide TM Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care


Download ppt "Advanced Cardiac Life Support"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google