ACLS review: Bradycardia part 2
Third Degree Heart Block
ECG Characteristics
Rate: The atrial rate is typically normal. The ventricular rate will be slower. If a junctional focus is controlling the ventricles, the rate will be 40 - 60. If the focus is ventricular, the rate will be 20 - 40.
Rhythm: Since the atrial and ventricular foci are firing regularly, the P - P and the R - R intervals will be regular.
P Wave: Upright and uniform. There are more P waves than QRS complexes
PRI: There is no PRI, because the block at the AV node is complete. There is no association between the P waves and the QRS complexes.
QRS: If the focus is junctional, less than 0.12 seconds. If the focus is ventricular, the QRS will be > 0.12.
Types of Bradycardia
· Absolute Bradycardia: Defines bradycardia by heart rate (below 60)
· Relative Bradycardia: Defines bradycardia by symptoms ( i.e. hypotension with HR of 65)
Symptomatic Bradycardia
· Symptomatic implies that an arrhythmia is causing symptoms, such as palpitations, lightheadedness, or dyspnea, but the patient is stable and not in imminent danger.
· In such cases more time is available to decide on the most appropriate intervention
Unstable Bradycardia
· Refers to a condition in which vital organ function is acutely impaired or cardiac arrest is ongoing or imminent.
· When an arrhythmia causes a patient to be unstable, immediate intervention is indicated
Serious signs and symptoms
· Chest pain
· Syncope
· Shortness of breath
· Cold and clammy skin
· Decreased level of consciousness
· Hypotension
· Pulmonary congestion
· Congestive Heart Failure
· Acute Myocardial Infarction
Reviewed 2/28/16
Reviewed 2/28/16
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