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Arrhythmias

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Title: Arrhythmias


1
Arrhythmias
  • Medicine Clerkship Lecture
  • By
  • John Liuzzo, M.D., Ph.D.

2
Case 1
  • A 59 y/o man collapses without warning while
    eating dinner. A family member initiates
    cardiopulmonary respiration and within 5 minutes
    paramedics arrive. After a quick look at his
    rhythm using the defibrillator paddles, they
    administer one 200-Joule shock. On arrival in the
    ER he is unconscious and intubated, and requires
    mechanical intubation. A telemetry monitor shows
    sinus tachycardia. The family states that the
    patient did not take any drugs, either illicit or
    prescribed, before the event.
  • 1) What is the most likely rhythm documented by
    the paramedics?
  • 2) What is the most likely heart disease in this
    patient?

3
Case 1 (cont)
  • The resuscitated patient is admitted to the
    hospital, where ECG reveals evidence of an old
    anterior myocardial infarction. An acute MI is
    ruled out on the basis of cardiac enzyme levels.
    Over the course of 24 hours, the patient recovers
    fully neurologically. Cardiac catherization
    reveals single-vessel coronary disease (100
    obstruction of the left anterior descending
    artery) and an anteroapical aneurysm. An exercise
    test reveals good tolerance and no evidence of
    myocardial ischemia or arrythmias with exercise.
    A 24 hour Holter monitor shows an average of 30
    PVCs per hour, but no ventricular tachycardia.
  • 3) What is the most likely acute cause of the
    arrythmia in this patient?
  • 4) How should this patients condition be managed?
  • 5) If electrophysiological studies reveal no
    abnormal rhythms, you should?

4
Outline
  • Atrial tachyarrythmias
  • - Regular Sinus tachycardia
  • Paroxysmal Atrial
    Tachycardia
  • Atrial Flutter with
    constant conduction
  • - Irregular Atrial Fibrillation
  • Multifocal Atrial
    Tachycardia
  • Atrial Flutter with
    irregular conduction
  • Bradyarrhythmias
  • Sinus bradycardia
  • Sinus Pause
  • AV Block
  • Ventricular tachyarrhythmias
  • Premature ventricular
    contraction
  • Ventricular
    tachycardia
  • Ventricular
    fibrillation

5
Introduction
  • Sustained atrial tachyarrhythmias usually permit
    adequate cardiac output
  • Sustained ventricular arrhythmias often cause
    collapse or death

6
Atrial Tachyarrythmias
  • Two categories regular cardiac rhythms and
    irregular rhythms
  • In general, atrial tachyarrythmias do not
    interfere with inter- or intra-ventricular
    conduction
  • The QRS remains narrow in form
  • Occasionally, atrial arrythmias cause aberrant
    ventricular conduction with a wide QRS complex.

7
Regular Atrial Tachycardias
  • 1) Sinus Tachycardia physiologic or pathologic
    increase of sinus rate gt 100 bpm.
  • Treat the condition causing the tachycardia, not
    the tachycardia itself.
  • However, in cases of acute MI sinus tachycardia
    must be controlled to prevent myocardial ishemia
    (beta blockers or Ca-channel blockers)
  • 2) Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia sudden onset, a
    normal heart, HR 150-250 bpm.
  • P waves not visible because buried in the QRS
    complex or the T wave
  • Therapy quiet setting and comfort the patient to
    reduce sympathetic discharge. Increase vagal tone
    by carotid sinus massage or valsalva maneuver.
    Medical therapy Beta-blocker, Ca channel
    blocker, digoxin, adenosine. If angina,
    hypotension, or CHF then consider countershock.

8
Regular atrial tachycardia (cont)
  • 3) Atrial Flutter with constant conduction
    occurs in patients with some sort of heart
    disease (e.g. CAD, pericarditis, valvular
    disease, cardiomyopathy)
  • Atrial rate of 240-400 bpm. Usually conducted to
    the ventricle with block so that ventricular rate
    is a fraction of the atrial rate
  • On ECG produces a classic saw tooth pattern
  • Therapy IV digoxin, beta-blocker, or Ca-channel
    blocker may convert the arrythmia to NSR. Use to
    control the ventricular response which helps
    maintain hemodynamic stability (to 31 or 41
    block)
  • If medical therapy does not convert to NSR,
    atrial flutter usually convert itself over time,
    either to Atrial fibrillation or NSR
  • Use direct current cardioversion if pt is
    hemodynamically unstable

9
Irregular Atrial Tachycardias
  • 1) Atrial Fibrillation an irregularly irregular
    arrythmia in which there is no ordered
    contraction of the atria, but rather multiple
    discoordinate wave fronts of depolarization that
    send a large number of irregular impulses to
    depolarize the AV node
  • ECG irregular impulses produce an irregular
    ventricular response, the rate of which depends
    on the number of impulses conducted
  • Causes of atrial fibrillation include
  • stress, fever, excessive alcohol
    intake, volume depletion, Wolf-Parkinson White
    syndrome, pericarditis, CAD, MI, pulmonary
    emboli, mitral valve disease, thyrotoxicosis, and
    idiopathic (lone) atrial fibrillation

10
Atrial Fibrillation (cont)
  • If the patient is hemodynamically unstable, or
    demonstrates increase in angina pectoris or
    worsening of CHF, immediate DC cardioversion is
    indicated
  • If the patient is hemodynamically stable, focus
    on controlling the ventricular response, while
    simultaneously treating the cause of the
    arrythmia (use beta-blocker, Ca-channel blocker,
    or digoxin)
  • Once the rate is controlled cardioversion may
    occur spontaneously or with anti-arrythmic drugs,
    or DC cardioversion
  • If patient in atrial fibrillation gt 48 hours,
    then treat with anticoagulation for 3 weeks
    before attempted cardioversion because risk of
    intra-atrial thrombus is high after 48 hours

11
Irregular Atrial Tachycardias (cont)
  • 2) Multifocal Atrial Tachycardias there is
    synchronous atrial contraction, but the
    contraction arises from many sites in the atria,
    not from the sinus node
  • In majority of MAT the patient has antecedent
    pulmonary disease
  • On ECG the multi-sites of origin of atrial
    contraction produces many P wave configurations,
    and different R-R intervals
  • Three or more different P wave morphologies are
    needed to make the diagnosis P-R interval may
    vary
  • Therapy to improve the patients oxygenation,
    ventilation, and airway mechanics. If not
    effective, can use Ca-channel blockers

12
Irregular Atrial Tachycardias (cont)
  • 3) Atrial Flutter with irregular conduction
  • there is varying block, e.g. 21 alternating with
    31 block, thus the rhythm is irregular
  • Therapy is the same as atrial flutter with
    constant block

13
Case 2
  • A 62 y/o man, w/ hx of HTN, CAD, and CHF,
    presents to the E.D. with a c/o worsening SOB. He
    has been experiencing DOE (one block) for a long
    time, and usually sleeps on three pillows. Over
    the last few days the SOB reoccurs even with the
    slightest exertion. He is experiencing fatique
    and lightheadness and also has observed worsening
    of the swelling in his legs
  • PMH hypertension, CAD, CHF, mitral valve
    stenosis
  • Medications Enalapril 20 mg BID Metoprolol
    50 mg BID
  • ECASA 325 mg QD
    Furosemide 40 mg PO QD
  • Social Hx Smoking 2 ppd for 30 yrs
  • Alcohol 3-4 drinks per week
    (red wine)
  • Married, lives with wife,
    retired high school teacher
  • Family Hx F-acute MI age 65 M-hypertension, DM

14
Case 2 (cont)
  • Physical Exam
  • elderly WM, moderate respiratory distress
  • Wt90kg, R24, BP150/70, P125, T98.6F, Pulse
    Ox93 on RA
  • Neck elevated JVP
  • Heart S1,S2 of variable intensity, S3 gallop
    present, irregularly irregular rhthym, II/VI
    holosystolic murmer heard best at apex with
    radiation to axilla
  • Lungs bibasilar dullness, rales extending two
    thirds way up from the basal lung fields
    bilaterally
  • Abd obese, otherwise nl exam
  • Ext 2 pitting edema.
  • ECG What will it show???

15
Case 2 Study Questions
  • 1) The patients presents with an exacerbation of
    CHF from new onset atrial fibrillation. Describe
    the pathogenesis of AF and what are the clinical
    conditions that may predispose to it?
  • 2) What are the possible consequences of A. Fib
    that may occur in this patient. How does the
    atrial fibrillation lead to his CHF?
  • 3) What are the major issues in management of
    patients with atrial fibrillation?

16
Bradyarrhythmias
  • Occurs when sinus node impulse generation is
    slowed or when normal impulses cannot be
    conducted to the ventricles because of AV nodal
    block or conduction system disease
  • Only a concern when the patient has become
    symptomatic with presyncope or syncope from low
    cardiac output
  • 1) Sinus bradycardia may be normal in trained
    athletes and requires no therapy
  • If extreme sinus bradycardia (lt35 bpm) from sinus
    node dysfunction may cause symptoms
  • 2) Sinus pause failure of the sinus node to
    generate an impulse on time
  • Pauses may last for several seconds and cause
    syncope. Definitive therapy requires pacemaker
    implantation

17
Bradyarrhythmias (cont)
  • 3) AV block all the impulses generated from the
    sinus node are not conducted to the ventricle
  • Types
  • 2nd degree Mobitz Type I (Wenkebach) block
    progressive prolongation of P-R interval until a
    generated P wave is not conducted. This block
    usually occurs at the level of the AV node.
  • 2nd degree Mobitz Type II block no prolongation
    of the P-R interval before the dropped beat.
    Often conduction in a 21 ratio is prolonged
    leading to symptomatic bradycardia. Block occurs
    in the AV node or in the His-Purkinje system
  • 3rd degree Complete Heart Block No impulses are
    conducted, and the ventricular rate becomes
    dependent on spontaneous ventricular
    depolarizations. Severe symptomatic bradycardia
    with HR25-40 bpm
  • Therapy Atropine, isoproterenol, transcutaneous
    pacing

18
Ventricular Tachyarrythmias
  • 1) Premature ventricular contractions heart
    beats arise from the ventricles, bypassing the
    His-Purkinje conduction system.
  • On ECG, the His -Purkinje system is bypassed, the
    QRS configuration is widened and bizarre in
    appearance
  • PVCs do not affect atrial depolarization, which
    proceeds normally and is dissociated with the
    PVC. The next sinus beat occurs at the same time
    it would have occurred if no PVC
  • Therapy Most isolated PVCs are benign and should
    not be treated

19
Ventricular Tachyarrythmias (cont)
  • 2) Ventricular tachycardia a regular rhythm that
    occurs paroxysmally and is gt 120 bpm
  • AV dissociation, allows the ventricular rhythm to
    proceed independently of the normal atrial rhythm
    and is the hallmark
  • During V. Tach, cardiac relaxation is impaired,
    and together with loss of AV syncrony (loss of
    electrical coordination) leads to severely
    reduced cardiac output, producing hypotension
  • Sustained V. Tach. Is usually a life-threatening
    arrythmia than can degenerate into ventricular
    fibrillation if untreated

20
Ventricular tachycardia (cont)
  • Physical Exam
  • in many cases exam is precluded by
    decompensation
  • If patient is relatively stable, cannon a waves
    can appear in the neck secondary to AV
    dissociation
  • Observed when the tricuspid valve is closed and
    the right atrial contraction occurs during
    ventricular contraction
  • Since the atrial blood cannot go forward against
    the closed tricuspid valve, backward flow
    produces a large bulge in the neck veins

21
Ventricular tachycardia (cont)
  • On ECG QRS is widened and bizarre in appearance
    (the His-Purkinje system is not utilized)
  • no relationship between P wave and QRS complex
    (atria and ventricles operate independently)
  • QRS may be monomorphic or polymorphic
  • a polymorphic arrythmia revolving around a
    central point associated with prolonged QT
    interval is torsades de pointes
  • Therapy DC cardioversion is urgently required in
    most cases since this arrythmia is unstable and
    life threatening
  • In a stable patient, or while preparing for
    cardioversion, IV amioderone, lidocaine,
    vasopressin, or procainamide may return the
    patients rhythm to normal

22
Ventricular Fibrillation
  • Characterized by lack of ordered contraction of
    the ventricles therefore there is no cardiac
    output
  • Ventricular fibrillation is synonymous with death
    unless conversion to an effective rhythm is
    accomplished
  • Begin resuscitation (ventilation, compressions,
    drug and electrical therapy) immediately upon
    recognizing V. Fib
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