EKG PU

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The client asks the nurse to explain what is meant by a ventricular bigeminy cardiac rhythm. What is the best response by the nurse?

"The rhythm has a normal beat, then a premature beat pattern." Bigeminy is a rhythm in which every other complex is a premature ventricular contraction (PVC). In trigeminy, every third complex is a PVC.

The nurse is caring for a client who had a permanent pacemaker surgically placed and is now ready for discharge. What statement made by the client indicates the need for more education?

"We will get rid of our microwave oven so it does not mess up the rate of my pacemaker."

The nurse is caring for a client who is being discharged after insertion of a permanent pacemaker. The client, an avid tennis player, is scheduled to play in a tournament in 1 week. What is the best advice the nurse can give related to this activity?

"You will need to cancel this activity; you must restrict arm movement above your head for 2 weeks." It is important to restrict movement of the arm until the incision heals. The client should not raise the arm above the head for 2 weeks afterward to avoid dislodging the leads. The client must avoid contact sports (eg, basketball, football, hockey).

A client with a second-degree atrioventricular heart block, Type II is admitted to the coronary care unit. How will the nurse explain the need to monitor the client's electrocardiogram (ECG) strip to the spouse?

.The small box will transmit the heart rhythm to the central monitor all the time.

The nurse is defibrillating a patient in ventricular fibrillation with paddles on a monophasic defibrillator. How much paddle pressure should the nurse apply when defibrillating?

20-25 pounds

The nurse would expect which of the following atrial rates to correlate with an idioventricular rhythm?

20-40. Above 40 indicates accelerated idioventricular rate.

The nurse reads an athletic client's electrocardiogram. What finding will be consistent with a sinus bradycardia?

42 beats per minute.

The nurse is caring for a client who is displaying a third-degree AV block on the EKG monitor. What is the priority nursing intervention for the client?

Alerting the HCP of the third-degree heart block. The client may experience low cardiac output with third-degree AV block. The healthcare provider needs to intervene to preserve the client's cardiac output. Treatment may require TCP (pacemaker).

The nurse is working on a telemetry unit, caring for a client who develops dizziness and a second-degree heart block, Mobitz Type 1. What will be the initial nursing intervention?

Administer an IV bolus of atropine.

Which of the following medication classifications is more likely to be expected when the nurse is caring for a client with atrial fibrillation?

Anticoagulant to prevent clot.

Which dysrhythmia has an atrial rate between 250 and 400, with saw-toothed P waves?

Atrial flutter. A flutter displays a fast atrial rate of 250-400, with saetooth P waves.

A client's electrocardiogram (ECG) tracing reveals a atrial rate between 250 and 400, with saw-toothed P waves. The nurse correctly identifies this dysrhythmia as

Atrial flutter. Sawtooth and high atrial rate indicate A flutter.

The nurse is monitoring a patient in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU) following a coronary artery bypass graft, observing a regular ventricular rate of 82 beats/min and "sawtooth" P waves with an atrial rate of approximately 300 beat/min. How does the nurse interpret this rhythm?

Atrial flutter. Sawtooth P waves indicate A-flutter. With A-flutter, atrial rate is often much faster than ventricular rate.

A client presents to the emergency department via ambulance with a heart rate of 210 beats/minute and a sawtooth waveform pattern per cardiac monitor. The nurse is most correct to alert the medical team of the presence of a client with which disorder?

Atrial flutter. Sawtooth waveform is characteristic of A Flutter. Other S/S include CP, SOB, and hypotension.

The nurse knows that electrocardiogram (ECG) characteristics of atrial fibrillation include what?

Atrial rate of 300-400

The licensed practical nurse is co-assigned with a registered nurse in the care of a client admitted to the cardiac unit with chest pain. The licensed practical nurse is assessing the accuracy of the cardiac monitor, which notes a heart rate of 34 beats/minute. The client appears anxious and states not feeling well. The licensed practical nurse confirms the monitor reading. When consulting with the registered nurse, which of the following is anticipated?

Atropine sulfate, a cholinergic blocking agent, is given intravenously (IV) to increase a dangerously slow heart rate.

Which postimplantation instruction must a nurse provide to a client with a permanent pacemaker?

Avoid sources of electrical interference. Electrical impulses can alter the pacemaker's rythmn.

A client has had a pacemaker implanted and the nurse will begin client education upon the client becoming alert. Which postimplantation instructions must be provided to the client with a permanent pacemaker?

Avoid sources of electrical interference. The nurse must instruct the client with a permanent pacemaker to avoid sources of electrical interference, such as MRI devices, large industrial motors, peripheral nerve stimulators, etc.

Which is not a likely origination point for cardiac dysrhythmias?

Bundle of HIS

When the appropriate electrocardiogram (ECG) complex follows the pacing spike, it is said to be

Captured. Capture is a term used to denote that the appropriate electrocardiogram (ECG) complex followed by the pacing spike. Triggered response means that the pacemaker will respond when it senses intrinsic heart activity. Inhibited response means that the response of the pacemaker is controlled by the activity of the client's heart.

The nurse knows that a pacemaker is the treatment of choice for what cardiac dysrhythmia?

Complete heart block.

After evaluating a client for hypertension, a health care provider orders atenolol, 50 mg P.O. daily. Which therapeutic effect should atenolol have in treating hypertension?

Decreased cardiac output and decreased systolic and diastolic blood pressure Decreased cardiac output and decreased systolic and diastolic blood pressureAs a long-acting, selective beta1-adrenergic blocker, atenolol decreases cardiac output and systolic and diastolic blood pressure; however, like other beta-adrenergic blockers, it increases peripheral vascular resistance at rest and with exercise. Atenolol may cause bradycardia, not tachycardia.

A nurse evaluates a client with a temporary pacemaker. The client's ECG tracing shows each P wave followed by the pacing spike. What is the nurse's best response?

Document the findings and continue to monitor the client. P waves should precede each pacing spike.

A client has been living with an internal, fixed-rate pacemaker. When checking the client's readings on a cardiac monitor the nurse notices an absence of spikes. What should the nurse do?

Double-check the monitoring equipment. One of the reasons for lack of pacemaker spikes is faulty monitoring equipment.

The nurse is caring for a client with atrial fibrillation. What procedure would be recommended if drug therapies did not control the dysrhythmia?

Elective cardioversion

The nurse is caring for a client who has premature ventricular contractions. What sign or symptom is observed in this client?

Fluttering

A client experiences a faster-than-normal heart rate when drinking more than two cups of coffee in the morning. What does the nurse identify on the electrocardiogram as an indicator of sinus tachycardia?

Heart rate of 118 BPM. Caffeine stimulates the SNS.

The nurse identifies which of the following as a potential cause of premature ventricular complexes (PVCs)?

Hypokalemia. PVCs can be caused by cardiac ischemia or infarction, increased workload on the heart (eg, exercise, fever, hypervolemia, heart failure, tachycardia), digitalis toxicity, acidosis, or electrolyte imbalances, especially hypokalemia.

Which nursing intervention is required to prepare a client with cardiac dysrhythmia for an elective electrical cardioversion?

Instruct the client to restrict food and oral intake. The nurse should instruct the client to restrict food and oral intake before the cardioversion procedure to prevent aspiration.

To evaluate a client's atrial depolarization, the nurse observes which part of the electrocardiogram waveform?

P wave

Which term is used to describe a tachycardia characterized by abrupt onset, abrupt cessation, and a QRS of normal duration?

Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia

A client admitted to the telemetry unit has a serum potassium level of 6.6 mEq/L. Which electrocardiographic (ECG) characteristic is commonly associated with this laboratory finding?

Peaked T waves. The client's serum potassium level is high. The T wave is an ECG characteristic reflecting repolarization of the ventricles. It may become tall or "peaked" if a client's serum potassium level is high. The U wave is an ECG waveform characteristic that may reflect Purkinje fiber repolarization. It is usually seen when a client's serum potassium level is low. The P wave is an ECG characteristic reflecting conduction of an electrical impulse through the atria and is not affected by a client's serum potassium level. The QT interval is an ECG characteristic reflecting the time from ventricular depolarization to repolarization, and is not affected by a client's serum potassium level.

A healthy adult client is seeing a health care provider for an annual physical examination. While the nurse is taking the client's vital signs, the client states, "Occasionally, my heart skips a beat. Is this normal?" What is the nurse's best response?

Premature Atrial Complex

Which ECG waveform characterizes conduction of an electrical impulse through the left ventricle?

QRS complex.

A 28-year-old client presents to the emergency department, stating severe restlessness and anxiety. Upon assessment, the client's heart rate is 118 bpm and regular, the client's pupils are dilated, and the client appears excitable. Which action should the nurse take next?

Question the client about alchohol or illicit drugs

The nurse is teaching a beginning EKG class to staff nurses. As the nurse begins to discuss the parts of the EKG complex, one of the students asks what the normal order of conduction through the heart is. What order does the nurse describe?

Sinoatrial (SA) node, atrioventricular (AV) node, bundle of His, right and left bundle branches, and the Purkinje fibers

When the nurse observes that the client's heart rate increases during inspiration and decreases during expiration, the nurse reports that the client is demonstrating?

Sinus dysrhythmia...

A client's Holter monitor strip reveals a heart rate with normal conduction but with a rate consistently above 105 beats/minute. What type of dysrhythmia would the cardiologist likely diagnose?

Sinus tachycardia.

A client is unconscious on arrival to the emergency department. The nurse in the emergency department identifies that the client has a permanent pacemaker due to which characteristic?

Spike on the rhythm strip. Pacemakers initiate a spike on the EKG strip through the V1 lead.

Common causes of sinus bradycardia

Vagal stimulation, hypothyroidism, and digoxin will cause a sinus bradycardia.

A patient who had a myocardial infarction is experiencing severe chest pain and alerts the nurse. The nurse begins the assessment but suddenly the patient becomes unresponsive, no pulse, with the monitor showing a rapid, disorganized ventricular rhythm. What does the nurse interpret this rhythm to be?

Ventricular Fibrillation. The most common dysrhythmia in patients with cardiac arrest is ventricular fibrillation, which is a rapid, disorganized ventricular rhythm that causes ineffective quivering of the ventricles. No atrial activity is seen on the ECG. The most common cause of ventricular fibrillation is coronary artery disease and resulting acute myocardial infarction. Ventricular fibrillation is always characterized by the absence of an audible heartbeat, a palpable pulse, and respiration.

The nurse working in the emergency department places a client in anaphylactic shock on a cardiac monitor and sees the cardiac rhythm below. What dysthymia should the nurse document?

Ventricular Tachycardia. The dysrhythmia is ventricular tachycardia because it has more than 3 premature ventricular contractions.

The nurse is working on a monitored unit assessing the cardiac monitor rhythms. Which waveform pattern needs attention first?

Ventricular fibrillation

A patient with hypertension has a newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation. What medication does the nurse anticipate administering to prevent the complication of atrial thrombi?

Warfarin (Coumadin)

A client has a medical diagnosis of an advanced first-degree atrioventricular block and is symptomatic. What initial treatment will the nurse be prepared to complete?

atropine

A client's Holter monitor strip reveals a heart rate with normal conduction but with a rate consistently above 105 beats/minute. What other conditions can cause this response in a healthy heart?

shock, strenuous exercise, and elevated temperature.

A patient comes to the emergency department with reports of chest pain after using cocaine. The nurse assesses the patient and obtains vital signs with results as follows: blood pressure 140/92, heart rate 128, respiratory rate 26, and an oxygen saturation of 98%. What rhythm on the monitor does the nurse anticipate viewing?

sinus tachycardia.

A client has a heart rate greater than 155 beats/minute and the ECG shows a regular rhythm with a rate of 162 beats/minute. The client is intermittently alert and reports chest pain. P waves cannot be identified. What condition would the nurse expect the physician to diagnose?

supraventricular tachycardia

A client with dilated cardiomyopathy is having frequent episodes of ventricular fibrillation. What medical treatment does the nurse anticipate the client will have to terminate the episode of ventricular fibrillation?

implantable cardioverter defibrillator

A patient has had an implantable cardioverter defibrillator inserted. What should the nurse be sure to include in the education of this patient prior to discharge? (Select all that apply.)

• Avoid magnetic fields such as metal detection booths. • Call for emergency assistance if feeling dizzy. • Record events that trigger a shock sensation.

A nurse has provided discharge instructions to a client who received an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). Which statement, made by the client, indicates the need for further teaching?

"I need to take a cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) class now that I have an ICD."

Two nursing students are reading EKG strips. One of the students asks the instructor what the P-R interval represents. The correct response should be which of the following?

"It shows the time needed for the SA node impulse to depolarize the atria and travel through the AV node." The PR interval is measured from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS complex and represents the time needed for sinus node stimulation, atrial depolarization, and conduction through the AV node before ventricular depolarization. In a normal heart the impulses do not travel backward. The PR interval does not include the time it take to travel through the Purkinje fibers.

The nurse receives a telephone call from a client with an implanted pacemaker who reports a pulse of 68 beats per minute, but the pacemaker rate is set at 72 beats per minute. What is the nurse's best response?

"Please come to the clinic right away so that we may interrogate the pacemaker to see if it is malfunctioning."

The nurse knows that what PR interval presents a first-degree heart block?

0.24 seconds. In adults, the normal range for the PR is 0.12 to 0.20 seconds. A PR internal of 0.24 seconds would indicate a first-degree heart block.

The nurse is working on a telemetry unit. When the nurse is interpreting a client's heart rhythm, the nurse counts each large block on graph paper as how many seconds?

0.4 seconds. Each small box= 0.02, five small boxes make up a large box, 0.4 seconds.

The nurse cares for a client with a dysrhythmia and understands that the P wave on an electrocardiogram (ECG) represents which phase of the cardiac cycle?

Atrial depolarization.

The nurse is assigned the following client assignment on the clinical unit. For which client does the nurse anticipate cardioversion as a possible medical treatment?

Atrial dysrythmias, such as A-fib.

The nurse is caring for a client with second-degree atrioventricular block, Type I with symptomatic bradycardia. What is the most likely medication the nurse will administer?

Atropine sulfate. Atropine blocks acetylcholine at parasympathetic neuroeffector sites and blocks vagal stimulation. The client will be treated with an anticholinergic that blocks the effects of the vagal nerve. Atenolol and nadolol are beta blockers that are used for chest pain, myocardial infarction, and hypertension. Diltazem is a calcium channel blocker used to treat angina or slow the heart rate.

A nurse is caring for a client who's experiencing sinus bradycardia with a pulse rate of 40 beats/minute. The client's blood pressure is 80/50 mm Hg and the client reports dizziness. Which medication does the nurse anticipate administering to treat bradycardia?

Atropine. I.V. push atropine is used to treat symptomatic bradycardia. Dobutamine is used to treat heart failure and low cardiac output. Amiodarone is used to treat ventricular fibrillation and unstable ventricular tachycardia. Lidocaine is used to treat ventricular ectopy, ventricular tachycardia, and ventricular fibrillation.

A client tells the nurse "my heart is skipping beats again; I'm having palpitations." After completing a physical assessment, the nurse concludes the client is experiencing occasional premature atrial complexes (PACs). The nurse should instruct the client to:

Avoid drinking caffeine.

A nurse provides morning care for a client in the intensive care unit (ICU). Suddenly, the bedside monitor shows ventricular fibrillation and the client becomes unresponsive. After calling for assistance, what action should the nurse take next?

Begin cardiopulmonary resuscitation. ABG's should be your priority after calling for help.

The nurse assesses a client with a heart rate of 120 beats per minute. What are the known causes of sinus tachycardia?

Hypovolemia. The causes of sinus tachycardia include physiologic or psychological stress (acute blood loss, anemia, shock, hypovolemia, fever, and exercise).

A nurse is teaching the client about the causes of fast heart rates. What client statement indicates the client requires more teaching?

I will drink coffee with only two of my meals per day. Coffee stimulates the sympathetic N.S., which increases the heart rate.

The nurse recognizes which as being true of cardioversion?

Defibrillator should be set to deliver a shock during the QRS complex. Cardioversion involves the delivery of a "timed" electrical current. The defibrillator is set to synchronize with the ECG and deliver the impulse during the QRS complex. The synchronization prevents the discharge from occurring during the vulnerable period of repolarization (T wave), which could result in VT or ventricular fibrillation.

The nurse is preparing a client for upcoming electrophysiology (EP) studies and possible ablation for treatment of atrial tachycardia. What information will the nurse include in the teaching?

During the procedure, the dysrhythmia will be reproduced under controlled conditions. During EP studies, the patient is awake and may experience symptoms related to the dysrhythmia.The client does not receive general anesthesia. The EP procedure time is not easy to determine. EP studies do not always include ablation of the dysrhythmia.

A client with an atrial dysrhythmia has come to the clinic for a follow-up appointment and to talk with the health care provider about options to stop this dysrhythmia. What procedure could be used to treat this client?

Elective electrical cardioversion

A client reports light-headedness, chest pain, and shortness of breath. They physician orders tests to ascertain what is causing the client's problems. Which test is used to identify cardiac rhythms?

Electrocardiogram. EKG's are used to asses normal ad abnormal heart rhythms.

A patient is 2 days postoperative after having a permanent pacemaker inserted. The nurse observes that the patient is having continuous hiccups as the patient states, "I thought this was normal." What does the nurse understand is occurring with this patient?

Lead wire displacement. Hiccups after pacemaker insertion could indicate a lead wire stimulating the Vagal Nerve.

Which nursing intervention must a nurse perform when administering prescribed vasopressors to a client with a cardiac dysrhythmia?

Monitor VS and cardiac rhythm.

The nurse is placing electrodes for a 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG). The nurse would be correct in placing an electrode on which area for V1?

Right side of sternum, fourth intercostal space.

The nurse is speaking with a client admitted with a dysrhythmia. The client asks the nurse to explain the "F waves" on the electrocardiogram. What is the nurse's best response?

The F waves are flutter waves representing atrial activity."

The nurse documents that a client is having a normal sinus rhythm. What characteristics of this rhythm has the nurse assessed?

The SA node initiates the impulse. The SA node is the primary pacemaker of the heart.

A client with heart failure asks the nurse how dobutamine affects the body's circulation. What is the nurse's best response?

The medication increases the force of the myocardial contraction.


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