ACLS For Tachycardia
ACLS For Tachycardia
ACLS For Tachycardia
EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2
Recognising ECG
Narrow complex tachycardia
A tachycardia is defined as a heart rate greater than 100 beats
per minute (bpm). In narrow complex tachycardias the QRS
complex is shorter than 120 ms (three small squares on the
ECG).
Wide complex tachycardia
The QRS-complex needs to be wide. >120ms (or >3 small
squares).
The patient needs to be tachycardic, >100/min
TO DIFFERENTIATE NARROW AND BROAD COMPLEX TACHYCARDIA
SINUS TACHYCARDIA
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY NONE. SYMPTOM NOT ARRHYTHMIA
NORMAL IMPULSE CONDUCTION AND
FORMATION
ECG CHARACTERISTICS RATE:>100/MIN
RHYTHM: SINUS
PR<0.02sec
P FOR ALL QRS, QRS<0.10 SEC
CLINICAL FEATURES SYMPTOM OF UNDERLYING DISEASE
CAUSES FEVER, HYPOXIA, ANEMIA,
HYPERTHYROIDISM
WORD OF CAUTION OF FOLLOWING ACLS PROTOCOL IN
SINUS TACHYCARDIA
The fact of the matter is that sinus tach at rates between 150-
200 not only exists, but is not uncommon. We need to be
better at assessing for sinus tachycardia, because it is the most
common SVT.
Atrial flutter & Fibrillation
MONOMORPHIC
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY ORIGIN IS VENTRICLE AND SINGLE FOCUS
USUALLY AREA OF INFARCT, ISCHAEMIA,
INJURY
ECG V.RATE 150-250/MIN,
NO P WAVE, PR ABSENT
QRS IS WIDE & BIZARRE BUT REGULAR,
>0.12 SEC, T waves of opposite polarity to
QRS. Same morphology for all QRS
Hypotension, altered mental status, shock, chest pain, acute heart failure
Question yourself for the scenario of
tachycardia
1.. QRS narrow or wide