Pediatric PEA Part 1
Pediatric PEA
Pediatric Non-profusing
Rhythms
·
Pulseless electrical activity
·
Asystole
·
Agonal Rhythms
·
Ventricular tachycardia
·
Ventricular fibrillation
Cardiac arrest in
infants and children
·
Does not usually result from a primary cardiac
cause
·
Terminal result of progressive respiratory
failure or shock
·
Asphyxia begins
·
Period of systemic hypoxemia, hypercapnia, and
acidosis
·
Progresses to bradycardia and hypotension
·
Culminates with cardiac arrest
Pulseless
Electrical Activity
·
Displays a rhythm on the monitor but does not
have an arterial pulse
·
Confirm pulselessness with doppler
·
Key to treatment is CPR and early identification
of possible causes
·
Outcome is very poor unless the cause can be
established and treated
·
Pediatric patients who are in PEA do not benefit
from defibrillation
Note: The most common ECG findings in infants and
children in cardiac arrest are asystole and PEA. PEA is organized electrical
activity—most commonly slow, wide QRS complexes—without palpable pulses.
Pulseless electrical activity (PEA), in which electrical activity is visible on
the electrocardiogram but central pulses are absent (previously referred to as
EMD)
Children with pulseless electrical activity are apneic
with absent pulses and signs of poor perfusion. The electrocardiogram shows
organized electrical activity, although no pulses are present. The outcome from
PEA is very poor unless the cause can be established and treated
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