Morning Report
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Transcript Morning Report
Morning Report
September 23, 2010
ECG
Rate
Rhythm
What do you think?
What do you want to do?
SA node
SA node
Cardiac pacemaker
Upper wall of the RA
Sinus Rhythm
Normal heart rhythm controlled by SA node
p-wave before every QRS
PR – 120-200 msec
SA node
Sinus Arrhythmia
Healthy children
Decrease in SA node firing due to activation of the vagus nerve
by exhalation
HR varies with respiration
Normal sinus rhythm with prolongation of RR during
exhalation
The Atria
Premature Atrial Contractions (PACs)
Ectopic focus stimulates the atria without input from the SA
node
Causes
Drug use, caffeine, electrolyte imbalance, mostly unknown
Symptoms (Usually asymptomatic)
Skipped beat, pause followed by strong beat
ECG
Premature, inverted or oddly shaped P waves, sharp inflections in T waves
May have narrow, wide or no QRS depending on focus
Treatment
Reassurance, avoidance
The Atria
Atrial Flutter
250-400 bpm
Newborns or children with
structural heart disease
Reentrant circuit confined to RA
Symptoms
CHF (infants), dizziness, syncope, CP, SOB
ECG
Inverted “saw-tooth”
Ventricular conduction - 1:1 (300bpm), 1:2 (150-200bpm)
Treatment
Urgent cardiac eval and treatment
The Atria
Atrial fibrillation
Uncommon in young children
Rapid fibrillation of the atrial muscle without coordinated
contraction
Causes
Structural heart disease
Stretching of atria
Symptoms
Palpitations, CP, syncope
ECG
Irregularly irregular rhythm
Absent or low voltage p-waves
Treatment
Urgent referral to cards
Clot formation >24h
The AV node
Supraventricular Tachycardia
Rapid tachycardia originating above the bundle of His
1/250 children
3 categories
Reentrant tachycardia with accessory pathway
WPW
Reentrant AV nodal tachycardia
Atrial ectopic tachycardia
SVT
Heart rates 220-270bpm
Symptoms
Infants prolonged
Poor feeding, pallor, irritability, lethargy, HD compromise 24-48h
School age
“beeping in chest”, heart pounding, CP, SOB, sweating, exercise intolerance
HR may be 180
ECG
Narrow complex tachycardia
P waves difficult to see
Finding vary with cause
Treatment
Cardiac referral
EP study and ablation
The Ventricles
Premature Ventricular Contractions (PVCs)
Ectopic firings within the ventricle
25% of healthy children
Symptoms
Asymptomatic, chest fullness, dizziness, “heart skips”
ECG
Premature, bizarre, wide QRS complex not preceded by a p-wave
Often followed by a compensatory pause
Treatment
Benign if single, suppressed by exercise and no family history of death
Referral to cardiology if history is suspicious
The Ventricles
Long QTc Syndrome
Associated with a potentially dangerous arrhythmia, torsades de
pointes
QTc = QT/√previous RR
QTc >450 msec is suggestive
FH of sudden death, deafness
Symptoms
Syncope, seizures, palpitations, cardiac arrest (10%)
Fainting while swimming, playing sports or exercising
Treatment
Refer if symptoms or if ECG is abnormal
Ventricular Tachycardia
Tachycardia of at least 3 successive ventricular beats
<30 sec – nonsustained
>30 sec – sustained
Causes
Drugs, caffeine, decongestants, electrolyte imbalances
Symptoms
Abnormal hearts, asymptomatic, pallor, fatigue, palpitations,
feeding intolerance
Ventricular Tachycardia
ECG
Bizarre, wide QRS complex (>120 msec), tachycardia
May or may not see p-waves
T waves are opposite polarization to QRS
Treatment
ABCs
Cardiac Evaluation
Ventricular Fibrillation
Rare cardiac emergency
Uncoordinated activity of the cardiac muscle fibers
Often results in cardiac arrest
Nonpalpable pulses
ECG
Bizarre, random waveform without clearly identifiable P waves
or QRS complexes and a roaming baseline
Treatment
ABCs
Defibrillation