The document provides guidelines for responding to various cardiac arrhythmias and cardiac arrest situations. It outlines the primary and secondary survey process, including the ABCDE approach. It recommends starting with chest compressions for pulseless patients, calling for help, and considering early defibrillation if available. It then provides treatment guidelines for specific arrhythmias and situations, including medications, cardioversion, and other interventions depending on the patient's heart rhythm, heart function, and stability. The guidelines aim to establish the diagnosis and treat any reversible causes while controlling the heart rate and rhythm.
The document provides guidelines for responding to various cardiac arrhythmias and cardiac arrest situations. It outlines the primary and secondary survey process, including the ABCDE approach. It recommends starting with chest compressions for pulseless patients, calling for help, and considering early defibrillation if available. It then provides treatment guidelines for specific arrhythmias and situations, including medications, cardioversion, and other interventions depending on the patient's heart rhythm, heart function, and stability. The guidelines aim to establish the diagnosis and treat any reversible causes while controlling the heart rate and rhythm.
The document provides guidelines for responding to various cardiac arrhythmias and cardiac arrest situations. It outlines the primary and secondary survey process, including the ABCDE approach. It recommends starting with chest compressions for pulseless patients, calling for help, and considering early defibrillation if available. It then provides treatment guidelines for specific arrhythmias and situations, including medications, cardioversion, and other interventions depending on the patient's heart rhythm, heart function, and stability. The guidelines aim to establish the diagnosis and treat any reversible causes while controlling the heart rate and rhythm.
The document provides guidelines for responding to various cardiac arrhythmias and cardiac arrest situations. It outlines the primary and secondary survey process, including the ABCDE approach. It recommends starting with chest compressions for pulseless patients, calling for help, and considering early defibrillation if available. It then provides treatment guidelines for specific arrhythmias and situations, including medications, cardioversion, and other interventions depending on the patient's heart rhythm, heart function, and stability. The guidelines aim to establish the diagnosis and treat any reversible causes while controlling the heart rate and rhythm.
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Assess responsiveness (speak loudly, gently
shake patient if no trauma - "Annie, Annie,
are you OK?"). Call for help/crash cart if unresponsive. ABCDs Airway Open airway, look, listen, and feel for breathing. Breathing If not breathing, slowly give 2 rescue breaths. Circulation Check pulse. If pulseless, begin chest compressions at 100/min, 15:2 ratio. Consider no defibrillator nearby Defibrillation Attach monitor, determine rhythm. If VF or pulseless VT: shock up to 3 times. If not, basic CPR. Then, move quickly to Secondary Survey.
After initial (primary) assessment done Another set of ABCDs Airway Establish and secure an airway device (ETT, LMA, COPA, Combitube, etc.). Breathing Ventilate with 100% O2. Confirm airway placement (exam, ETCO2, and SpO2). Remember, no metabolism/circulation = no blue blood to lungs = no ETCO2. Circulation Evaluate rhythm, pulse. If pulseless continue CPR, obtain IV access, give rhythm-appropriate medications Differential Diagnosis Identify and treat reversible causes. Treatment Consider bicarb, pacing early Bicarb (NaHCO3) Epinephrine 1 mg IV q3-5 min Atropine 1 mg IV q3-5 min. Max 0.04 mg/kg
Consider possible causes Hypoxia, Hyperkalemia, Hypothermia, Drug overdose (e.g., tricyclics), Myocardial Infarction Consider termination. If patient had >10min with adequate resucitative effort and no treatable causes present
Primary Survey Secondary Survey assess need for airway, oxygen, IV, monitor, fluids, vitals, pulse ox 12-lead ECG, Consider Dx If AV block: 2nd degree (type 2) or 3rd degree: standby TCP, prepare for transvenous pacing. If serious signs or symptoms, Atropine 0.5-1.0 mg IV push q 3-5 min. max 0.04 mg/kg Pacing Use transcutaneous pacing (TCP) immediately if sx severe Dopamine 5-20 g/kg/min Epinephrine 2-10 g/min
Primary Survey, Secondary Survey: Is patient stable or unstable? stable: determine rhythm, treat accordingly unstable =chest pain, dyspnea, decreased level of conciousness, low BP, CHF, AMI If HR is cause of symptom (almost always HR>150): cardiovert Specific Rhythms Atrial fib/flutter Narrow-Complex (Supraventricular) Tachycardia Wide-Complex Tachycardia, Unknown Type Stable Ventricular Tachycardia
Generally not needed for HR<150. If HR>150, prepare for immediate cardioversion. May give brief drug trial. Steps: Prepare emergency equipment Medicate if possible Cardioversion monomorphic VT with pulse, PSVT, A fib, A flutter: 100-200-300-360 J* (Synchronized) may try 50J first for PSVT or A flutter may use equivalent biphasic (biphasic 70, 120, 150, and 170 J) if machine unable to synchronize and patient critical, defibrillate polymorphic VT: use VT/VF algorithm Management: Control rate, consider rhythm cardioversion, and anticoagulate as shown below, according to Category: 1, 2 or 3 Category 1. Normal EF Rate control: Ca-blocker or beta-blocker. Cardiovert: If onset < 48 hours, consider DC cardioversion OR with one of the following agents: amiodarone, ibutilide, procainamide, (flecainide, propafenone), sotalol. If onset > 48 hours: avoid drugs that may cardiovert (e.g. amiodarone). Either: Delayed Cardioversion: anticoagulate adequately x 3 weeks, then cardioversion, then anticoagulate x 4 weeks Early Cardioversion: iv heparin, then TEE, then cardioversion within 24 hours, then anticoagulate x 4 weeks
Category 3. WPW A fib Suggested by: delta wave on resting EKG, very young patient, HR>300 Avoid adenosine, beta-blocker, Ca-blocker, or Digoxin If < 48 hour: If EF normal: one of the following for both rate control and cardioversion: amiodarone, procainamide, propafenone, sotalol, flecainide If EF abnormal or CHF: amiodarone or cardioversion If > 48 hour Medication listed above may be associated with risk of emboli Anticoagulate and DC cardioversion as in Category 1.
Sindrom Wolff Parkinson White
If unstable, cardiovert No cardioversion for stable SVT with low EF. Management 12-lead ECG, clinical exam Vagal stimulation, adenosine. Consider esophageal lead Treat according to specific rhythm: PSVT MAT Junctional
EF normal Refleks Vagal Ca-blocker> beta-blocker> digoxin> DC Cardioversion. Consider procainamide, sotalol, amiodarone. If unstable proceed to cardioversion
EF < 40%, CHF No Cardioversion. Digoxin or amiodarone or diltiazem. If unstable proceed to cardioversion EF normal: amiodarone, beta-blocker, Ca- blocker
EF < 40%, CHF: amiodarone Notes rare, most commonly misdiagnosed PSVT. likely digoxin or theophylline OD, catecholamine state no cardioversion
If unstable, cardiovert Attempt to establish specific diagnosis 12 leads, esophageal lead, Clinical info Note: the use of adenosine to differentiate SVT vs VT is now de-emphasized. If unable to make Dx, treat according to EF: EF normal: DC cardioversion or procainamide or amiodarone EF < 40%, CHF: DC cardioversion or amiodarone Note: no lidocaine and bretylium in protocol
May proceed directly to cardioversion If not, treat according to morphology: Monomorphic VT EF normal: one of the following: procainamide (2a), sotalol (2a) OR amiodarone (2b), lidocaine (2b) EF poor amiodarone 150 mg iv over 10 min OR lidocaine 0.5-0.75 mg/kg iv push Synchromized cardioversion
Polymorphic VT Baseline QT Normal Possible ischemia (treat) or electrolyte (esp. low K, Mg) abnormality (correct) EF normal: betablocker, amiodarone, procainamide, or sotalol EF poor amiodarone 150 mg iv over 10 min synchromized cardioversion Prolonged QT baseline (torsade) Correct electrolyte abnormalities.
Treatment options: magnesium, overdrive pacing, isoproterenol Primary Survey, then Secondary Survey: rule out pseudo-PEA (handheld doppler: look for cardiac mechanical activities. If present treat agressively). Problem Search for the probable cause ... Wide QRS: suggests massive myocardial injury, hyperkalemia, hypoxia, hypothermia Wide QRS+Slow: consider drug OD (tricyclics, beta- blockers, Ca-blockers, digoxin) Narrow complex: suggests intact heart; consider hypovolemia, infection, PE, tamponade ... and treat as needed
Consider fluid challenge empirically Consider bicarbonate hyperkalemia K (Class 1) bicarbonate responsive acidosis, tricyclic OD, to alkinalize urine for aspirin OD (Class2a) prolonged arrest (Class 2b) not for hypercarbic acidosis Epinephrine: 1 mg IV q3-5 min Atropine If bradycardia, 1 mg IV q3-5 min max 0.04 mg/kg
If you prefer a mechanistic approach (and are used to thinking about MAP, CO, SVR, etc.) think of things that affect forward flow... Decreased Preload: Hypovolemia, Tamponade, Tension Pneumothorax Increased Afterload: Pulmonary Embolus Decreased Contractility: Hypoxia, Hypothermia, Acidosis, Myocardial Ischemia Altered Rate/Rhythm: Hyperkalemia, Drug Overdose
Tablets/toxins overdose Assess: Hx of medications, drug use Tx: Treat accordingly Tamponade, cardiac Assess: No pulse w/ CPR, JVD, narrow pulse pressure prior to arrest Tx: Pericardiocentesis Tension pneumothorax Assess: No pulse w/ CPR, JVD, tracheal deviation Tx: Needle thoracostomy Thrombosis, coronary Assess: History, EKG Tx: Acute Coronary Syndrome algorithm Thrombosis, pulmonary embolism Assess: No pulse w/ CPR, JVD Tx: Thrombolytics, surgery Remember: initial stacked shocks are part of the primary survey Implement the secondary survey after your stacked shocks. Meds: Shock-drug-shock-drug-shock pattern. Continue CPR while giving meds, and shock (360J or 150J if biphasic) within 30-60 seconds. Evaluate rhythm and check for pulse immediately after shocking. Epi or vasopressin big drugs (may give either one as first choice). If VF/PVT persists, may move on to antiarrhythmics and sodium bicarb max out one antiarrhythmic before proceeding to the next in order to limit pro-arrhythmic drug-drug interactions.
Shock 200J* If VF or VT is shown on monitor: shock immediately. Do not lift paddles from chest after shocking - simultaneously charge at next energy level and evaluate rhythm. Shock 200-300J* If VF or VT persists on monitor, shock immediately. Do not check pulse, do not continue CPR, do not lift paddles from chest. After shocking, simultaneously charge at next energy level and evaluate rhythm. Shock 360J* If VF or VT persists, shock immediately. Epinephrine 1 mg IV q3-5 min. High dose epinephrine is no longer recommended Vasopressin 40 U IV one time dose (wait 5-10 minutes before starting epi). Preferred first drug? Shock 360J* Amiodarone (Class 2b) 300mg IV push. May repeat once at 150mg in 3-5 min max cumulative dose = 2.2g IV/24hrs Shock 360J* Magnesium Sulfate (Class 2b) 1-2 g IV (over 2 min) for suspected hypomagnesemia or torsades de pointes (polymorphic VT)
Shock 360J* Bicarbonate 1 mEq/kg IV for reasons below: Class 1: hyperkalemia Class 2a: bicarbonate-responsive acidosis, tricyclic OD, to alkinalize urine for aspirin OD Class 2b: prolonged arrest Not for hypercarbia-related acidosis, nor for routine use in cardiac arrest