Advanced patient care skills
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Transcript Advanced patient care skills
Thomas Forti R.N.
The EXAM
Certified EKG Technician
CET
GED and 60 HRs of training
110 Questions (100 Scored)
110 minuets Web exam
Score given following the exam
Don’t spend too much time on one
question
Try and figure out the answers before
reading the answers
Eliminate incorrect answer to try and figure
out correct answer
HIPAA
The Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996
Patient has right to confidentiality
Safeguards to ensure that an individual's
health information is used only for
purposes related to treatment, payment,
or healthcare operations
You are responsible for this when at
work.
HIPAA
Medicinal information needs to be sent
via secure (encrypted) pathways
Best way is to personally deliver the
information (Handing the MD the EKG)
Not leaving it in a mail box where someone
else could view it.
Keep work area clear of patient
information when you walk away
Protected Health information
Any information about
Health status
Health care services
Payment
Patient identifiers
Social security
Hone numbers
Address
Treatment
Assessment
Test results
Diagnoses
Medications
During
Direct contact
Phone calls
Faxes
Emails
Anatomy and Physiology
4 Chambers of the Heart
Right and Left Atria
Right and Left Ventricle
Sepal wall separate right from left
sides
Three layers of the heart
Endocardium
Myocardium
Epicardium
Heart is in a sac called
Pericardium AKA Pericardial Sac
Provided protection and lubrication
Anatomy and Physiology
Four Valves of the heart
Tricuspid and Mitral
○ Between the atria and
ventricle
Pulmonary and Aortic
○ Blood exits heart
Chordae Tendineae
○ Provide support to A-V
valves to prevent
regurgitation
(incompetence)
Anatomy and Physiology
Coronary Arteries
Vessels that supply blood to the myocardium
Occur during ventricular diastole
Normal perfusion to body occurs during systole
RCA
○ Supply right ventricle and inferior wall of left
ventricle (bottom)
Left Main Splits to
○ Circumflex
Supplies blood to posterior (back) and lateral (side)
○ LAD
Supplies blood to anterior and Left ventricle
Collateral circulation
○ Compensation for loss of O2 in other areas
Conduction System
Controls the synchronous, rhythmic
contraction of the heart muscle
SA Node
Sinoatrial node
60-100 BPM
Primary pacemaker of heart
Right Atria
Initiates atria contraction
Shows as P wave on EKG tracing
Internodal Pathways
Tracts that the impulse takes from SA-AV node
Conduction System
AV node
Atrioventricular node
40-60 BPM
Connects Atria to Ventricle
Impulse pulses here before heading to ventricles
PR interval
Bundle of His
Splits impulse to RBBB and LBBB
Sits in the Interventricular septum
Purkinje Fibers
Initiates myocardial contraction
20-40 BPM
EKG Theory
Measures electrical energy as it travels
through the heart
Records as energy over time
Millivolts and Seconds
EKG paper has small squares
1mm x 1mm
5 small boxes = 5mm = 1 large box
Tracings are made by a stylus
1mm on y axis = 0.1mv
1mm on x axis = 40ms or 0.04 seconds
1ms = 0.001 seconds
EKG Theory
EKG paper speed is 25 mm/sec
50mm/sec if rhythm is too fast
○ Only change paper speed if ordered by MD
Standard Amplitude
Amplitude is change over a period of time
10mm = 1mv
Gain is used to increase amplitude (size)
Calibration box
At beginning of lead
○ Speed and amplitude
○ Standard is 10mm tall and 5mm wide
○ Gain of 1 = 10mm, ½ = 5mm, 2 = 20mm
○ 25mm/sec = 5mm, 50mm/sec = 10mm
EKG Theory
Refer to user manual and hospital policy
For paper type
Cleaning (keypad, wires machine)
Daily user test
Correct power supply
Bio-engineer will calibrate machine if
needed
EKG Theory
Einthoven’s triangle
Willem Einthoven
○ Discover everything basic of
EKGs
Bi-Polar Leads
I, II, III
Unipolar leads
V1-V6
Augmented leads
○ avF, avR, avF
Calculating Heart Rates
1500 method
Atria rate- count the P-P interval
○ Small boxes between the P waves
Ventricle rate- count the R-R interval
○ Small boxes between the R waves
1500/boxes
Sequence method
AKA 300 method
○ Count the large boxes between the R-R waves
and
300/boxes
○ 300, 150, 100, 75, 60, 50
Calculating Heart Rates
6 second rule
Good for estimating rate if R-R intervals are
not regular
Count QRS complexes in 6 second strip and
multiply by 10
Marks under tracing indicate 3 seconds
Artifact
Wandering baseline
Most common cause is respirations
Move electrodes off torso and onto wrists and
ankles
Have patient relax and breath slowly
Seizures
Large artifact
Seizures must be controlled before EKG can be
done
Dry Skin
Electrodes might now adhere
○ Use Benzoin to promote adhesion
○ Abrade the skin
Artifact
Wet Skin
Dry skin
Use Benzoin to promote adhesion
Cold patient
Warm patient with blanket
May have to do EKG with artifact
Dry Gel
Use new electrodes
Cell Phones
Turn them off, remove and place aside
Can look like p waves often like A-flutter
Medical devices
Turn off or move away from EKG patient
Be careful in the ER or ICU
Lead Locations
3 Lead
White- Right Shoulder or clavicle area
Black- left shoulder or clavicle area
Red- Left lower abdomen area
Green- Right lower abdomen area
5 Lead
White- right sternum/clavicle area
Black- Left sternum/clavicle area
Red- Left lower thoracic area
Green- Right lower thoracic area
Brown- Just below and to the right of
bottom of sternum
Lead Locations
Precordial Leads
V1- 4th ICS, Right of Sternum
V2- 4th ICS, Left of sternum
V3- Between V2/V4
V4- 5th ICS, midclavicular
V5- 5th ICS, between V4/V6
V6- 5th ICS, midaxillary
Right precordial leads
Reverse V leads
Lead Locations
Posterior Leads
V7- Left posterior axillary line
V8- Left midscapular line
V9- left of spine
Stress test
Limb electrodes go on torso
Post EKG
Check leads for deflection direction
Check leads for artifact
Check that patient identifiers are on EKG
Name
DOB
Medical record number
Upload EKG Via hospital policy
Mount EKG or strip per hospital policy
Hole punch, scan or stick onto mounting paper
Measuring EKG’s
Know how to be able to measure
P-P interval
○ Time between Atria contractions
R-R interval
○ Time between Ventricle contractions
PR interval
○ Time from SA to ventricles
○ 0.12-0.2 seconds
QRS
○ Time for ventricles to depolarize
○ 0.06-0.12 seconds
Parts of Waves
Positive
Anything above isoelectric line
Negative
Anything below isoelectric line
PR segment
Time impulse travels through AV node
End or P to beginning of QRS
ST segment
Time it take for ventricles to repolarize
End of QRS to end of T wave
Parts of Waves
J Point
Point when ventricles depolarize and
ventricle repolarize
○ End of QRS
QT interval
Time it takes ventricles to depolarize and
repolarize
Sinus Rhythms
P wave resent
P wave upright and rounded
QRS complex narrow
80-120 milliseconds
PR 120-200 milliseconds
Regular Sinus Rhythm
Rate 60-100
Sinus Bradycardia
Rate less then 60
Sinus Tachycardia
Rate greater then 100
Sinus Arrhythmia
Rate around 60-100
Rhythm is irregular
Atria Rhythms
P waves abnormal shaped or absent
QRS complexes narrow
Atrial Fibrillations
Atrial Fibrillation with Rapid Ventricular
P waves = Flutter waves (abnormal P waves)
Rate varies
Regular
Supraventricular SVT
No P waves, No PR interval
Rate greater then 100
Irregularly irregular
Atrial Flutter
No P waves, No PR interval
Rate 60-100
Irregularly irregular
P waves often NOT seen
Regular
Premature Atrial Complex PAC
P wave abnormal
QRS follows P wave
NSR with PAC
Junctional Rhythms
Starts at AV node or Bundle of His
P wave absent or abnormal (inverted)
QRS narrow or above 120 milliseconds
Junctional Rhythm
P-wave absent or abnormal
○ Rate 40-60
Junctional Bradycardia
Rate less then 40
Accelerated Junctional Rhythm
Rate 60-100
Junctional Tachycardia
Rate above 100
Ventricle Rhythms
QRS complex wide
Idioventricular Rhythm
Wide QRS complexes
Rate 20-40
Ventricular tachycardia
Monomorphic
○ Wide QRS with rate above 120
○ Complexes look identical
Polymorphic
○ Complexes have different amplitude
Ventricular Rhythms
Ventricular Fibrillation
No identifiable waves
Asystole
Absence of electrical activity in the heart
Premature Ventricular Complex
Wide QRS, absent P waves
R wave opposite direction of T wave
NSR with PVC
Multifocal PVCs
○ Different shaped PVCs
○ Patterns – Bigeminy, Trigemity (every other or 3rd)
Heart Blocks
Impulse is delayed or blocked as it travels to
the ventricles
1st degree
PR interval greater then 200 milliseconds
2nd degree type 1
PR interval elongates until dropped QRS complex
2nd degree type 2
PR interval normal if present
Dropped QRS complex without warning
3rd degree
Complete lack of association between the atria and
ventricles
○ P waves present at normal rate
○ QRS waves at rate of Junctional rate or idioventricle
Could be wide or narrow
Injury
Ischemia
ST segment depression
T wave inversion
Injury
ST elevation
○ 1mm in limb leads
○ 2mm in precordial leads
Infarction
ST elevation will return to baseline
Pathological Q waves develop
Pathological Q waves can indicate MI
Lead Locations for MI
ST segment Morphology
Draw line from J point to top of T wave
Convex
ST segment is above line
Can be Ischemia STEMI
Concave
ST segment is below line
Can be ischemia but often benign
ST segment sloping
T Wave
T wave is peaked
T wave is Hyperacute
Hight is greater then ½ the QRS
T wave elongates
Cardiac Compromise
Tachy or brady
Pallor
Diaphoresis
Decrease in BP
Breathing problems
Anxiety or confusion
Cyanosis
Chest pain or tightness
Back, arm, jaw pain
Nausea and vomiting
Lightheadedness
Weakness
Syncope
Left-threating arrhythmias
Ventricular tachycardia
Check Pulse
Ventricular fibrillation
Call for help
Start CPR
Use AED
Asystole
Check in 2 leads
Call for help
Start CPR
Bradycardia
Call for help
Check Vitals
Prepare patient for pacing
Tachycardia
Call for help
Check vitals
Cardioversion
Pacemakers
Paced Ventricular
Paced Atrial-Ventricular
Patient Care
Responsible for knowing patients
Medical History
○ Smoking, alcohol, drugs, stress, exercise, nutrition, work
environment, family history, marital status, children
○ Past medical conditions
Stroke, MI, Aneurysm, murmurs, PE, DVTs, Heart failure,
hypertension, COPD, CHF
○ Current Complains
Pain, SOB, Edema, Palpitations, Fainting, Weakness
Surgical History
○ What, when, complications (more details if cardiac)
Medication List (also allergies)
○ Currently taking and recently stopped (last month or 2)
○ Include OTC medications, birth control, erectile dysfunction
Patient Care
Explain procedures fully with easy to
understand terms
Explain purpose, length, steps of
procedure
Preparation if test isn’t for today
Allow them to ask questions
Patient Care
EKG
Allow physician to assess the electrical
activity of the heart
Non-invasive, Painless
Around 10 mins
What the electrodes are for
Empty pockets, relax, lay flat avoid moring
or talking
Patient Care
Holter
Monitors activity for 24-72 hours
Instruct patient to bathe rior to appointment
○ Pt can not remove electrodes or get device wet during time
Loose fitting clothing to help prevent artifact
Notify if irritation occurs from electrodes
Normal daily activity
○ Including work exercise and sleep
Journal with date time and duration of any symptoms
○ Lightheadedness, palpations, chest pain, SOB
○ Note when medications taken, physical activity and sleeping
Patient to call physician office if electrodes fall off
○ Electrodes get replaced by Tech NOT patient
○ Batteries get changed by Tech NOT patient
○ Electrodes get moved by Tech
Call 911 for serious symptoms
Patient Care
Stress Test
Used to determine how the heart function under
increased workload from exercise
Take about 10 mins
Electrodes and Blood pressure during test
Baseline EKG prior and end of test
Test goes until
○ Symptoms occur
Lightheadedness, dizziness, SOB, Chest pain
○ Target heart rate reached or physician orders test to end
Patient not to eat, drink or smoke 3 hours prior
Continue normal medication unless instructed by
physician to hold medication
Wear clothing and shoes for exercising
Patient Care
Stress Test
Monitor for
○ Vital Sings
○ Arrhythmias
○ Cardiopulmonary compromise
○ Heart rate
Complications
○ Most common is hypotension and arrhythmias
○ Stop and let patient rest
○ Lay patient down
○ Report change to physician
Patient Care
Telemetry
Continuous monitoring of electrical system
Within hospital
Notify staff if symptoms occur
Vitals
Check Pulse
Adult- Radial
Child- Brachial
Apex use stethoscope
○ 5th ICS midclavicular
Pulse oximeter
○ Used to determine amount of oxygen in blood
○ Normal is above 95%
○ Cant read if: cold hands, colored nails,
edema, fake nails
Vitals
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms
Rhythms