Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
60 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
THE STUDY OF ARRHYTHMIAS IS CALLED WHAT?
|
ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY
|
|
THE WAYS TO ENSURE GOOD CONTACT BETWEEN THE ELECTRODE AND THE SKIN
|
ABRADE THE SKIN LIGHTLY; REMOVE HAIR AND DIRT; USE A CONTACT MEDIUM SUCH AS SALINE OR COMMERCIAL GEL
|
|
WHY IS THE STRAIGHT LINE PRODUCED WHEN THE EKG MACHINE IS ON BUT THE ELECTRODES ARE NOT ON THE PATIENT CALLED THE ISOELECTRIC LINE?
|
BECAUSE ALL OF THE ELECTRICAL FORCES ARE EQUAL
|
|
IF THE ELECTRICITY FLOWS TOWARD THE POSITIVE ELECTRODE, THE PATTERNS ON THE PAPER WILL BE WHAT?
|
UPRIGHT
|
|
IF THE ELECTRICITY FLOWS AWAY FROM THE POSITIVE ELECTRODE, OR TOWARD THE NEGATIVE ELECTRODE, WHAT PATTERN WILL APPEAR ON THE PAPER?
|
DOWNWARD DEFLECTION
|
|
SINGLE LEADS THAT GIVE GOOD PICTURES OF THE BASIC WAVE FORMS ARE CALLED MONITORING LEADS WHY?
|
BECAUSE THEY ARE USED TO MONITOR PATTERNS SUCH AS ARRHYTHMIAS
|
|
IF THIS WAS NOT STANDARDIZED, WE WOULD NOT BE ABLE TO COMPARE ONE PERSON'S EKG TO ANY OTHER EKG, OR COMPARE MORE THAN ONE EKG FROM THE SAME PERSON
|
THE GRAPH PAPER, THE SPEED OF THE EKG MACHINE, AND THE PLACEMENT OF THE ELECTRODES
|
|
IN STANDARD GRAPH PAPER, THERE ARE BOTH ________ AND ________ LINES, AND EVERY _______ LINE IS HEAVIER.
|
VERTICAL; HORIZONTAL; FIFTH
|
|
WHAT CAN THE LINE ON THE GRAPH PAPER HELP TO DETERMINE?
|
BOTH THE DIRECTION AND THE MAGNITUDE OF DEFLECTIONS.
|
|
WHAT WILL DETERMINE THE MAGNITUDE OF THE DEFLECTION?
|
STRENGTH OF THE CURRENT, OR ITS VOLTAGE
|
|
THE HEIGHT OF THE DEFLECTION WILL INDICATE WHAT?
|
THE VOLTAGE OR AMPLITUDE OF THE ELECTRICAL CHARGE THAT PRODUCED THE DEFLECTION
|
|
ON GRAPH PAPER, THE HORIZONTAL LINES MEASURE WHAT?
|
VOLTAGE
|
|
BESIDES VOLTAGE, WHAT ELSE CAN THE GRAPH PAPER HELP US TO DETERMINE?
|
TIME
|
|
WHAT DO THE VERTICAL LINES ON THE GRAPH PAPER TELL YOU?
|
HOW MUCH TIME IT TOOK FOR THE ELECTRICAL CURRENT WITHIN THE HEART TO TRAVEL FROM ONE AREA TO ANOTHER
|
|
WHICH LINES, VERTICAL OR HORIZONTAL, ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT MARKINGS FOR SINGLE ARRHYTHMIA IDENTIFICATION?
|
THE VERTICAL LINES B/C THEY TELL US ABOUT THE TIME IT TAKES FOR CURRENT TO TRAVEL ABOUT WITHIN THE HEART
|
|
WHAT IS THE STANDARD RATE AT WHICH THE EKG MACHINE RUNS PAPER PAST THE STYLUS?
|
25 MM PER SECOND
|
|
AT THE STANDARD RATE OF PAPER FEED FOR THE EKG, HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE TO GET FROM ONE HEAVY VERTICAL LINE TO THE NEXT?
|
.20 SECONDS
|
|
WHAT IS THE DISTANCE (IN TIME) BETWEEN TWO LIGHT VERTICAL LINES?
|
.04 SECONDS
|
|
FOR MOST DISCUSSIONS WE WILL CONSIDER THE ATRIA AND VENTRICLES AS ____________, EVEN THOUGH WE REALIZE THERE ARE FOUR CHAMBERS.
|
SINGLE UNITS (THE ATRIA AS ONE AND THE VENTRICLES AS ANOTHER)
|
|
IN A CARDIAC CYCLE, DO THE ATRIA OR VENTRICLES CONTRACT FIRST?
|
ATRIA
|
|
FOR EACH PACEMAKER IMPULSE, THE ELECTRICAL FLOW TRAVELS DOWN ____________ PATHWAYS, DEPOLARIZING THE ATRIA AND THEN THE VENTRICLES AS IT GOES.
|
CONDUCTION
|
|
WHAT DOES EACH CARDIAC CYCLE INCLUDE?
|
ALL OF THE ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY THAT WOULD NORMALLY BE EXPECTED TO BE PRODUCED IN A SINGLE BEAT
|
|
WHEN DOES THE CARDIAC CYCLE BEGIN AND WHAT DOES IT INCLUDE?
|
BEGINS WITH THE INITIATING IMPULSE FROM THE PACEMAKER AND ENCOMPASSES ALL PHASES UNTIL THE VENTRICLES ARE REPOLARIZED
|
|
IN LABELING ACTIVITY ON THE GRAPH PAPER, THE DEFLECTIONS ABOVE OR BELOW THE ISOELECTRIC LINE ARE CALLED WHAT?
|
WAVES
|
|
HOW MANY PROMINENT WAVES ARE THERE IN A SINGLE CARDIAC CYCLE?
|
FIVE- LABELED P,Q,R,S, AND T WAVES
|
|
WHAT IS AN INTERVAL?
|
AREA BETWEEN (AND POSSIBLY INCLUDING) WAVES
|
|
WHAT IS A SEGMENT?
|
IDENTIFIES A STRAIGHT LINE OR AREA OF ELECTRICAL INACTIVITY BETWEEN WAVES
|
|
WHAT IS THE FIRST WAVE YOU SEE ON THE CARDIAC CYCLE? WHERE DOES IT START?
|
THE P WAVE- STARTS WITH THE FIRST DEFLECTION FROM THE ISOELECTRIC LINE
|
|
THIS WAVE IS INDICATIVE OF ATRIAL DEPOLARIZATION
|
P WAVE
|
|
WHAT IS THE PR SEGMENT?
|
A SHORT PERIOD OF ELECTRICAL INACTIVITY BETWEEN THE P WAVE AND THE NEXT WAVE; INDICATES THE DELAY IN THE AV NODE
|
|
WHAT IS THE AREA OF THE HEART WITH THE SLOWEST CONDUCTION SPEED?
|
AV NODE
|
|
WHY IS IT NECESSARY FOR THE AV NODE TO CONDUCT SLOWER THAN ATRIA, VENTRICLES, AND SA NODE?
|
TO ALLOW TIME FOR ATRIAL CONTRACTION AND COMPLETE FILLING OF THE VENTRICLES
|
|
THE _____________ INCLUDES ALL ATRIAL AND NODAL ACTIVITY
|
PR INTERVAL
|
|
WHAT DOES THE PR INTERVAL INCLUDE?
|
THE P WAVE AND THE PR SEGMENT (ATRIAL DEPOLARIZATION AND DELAY IN THE AV NODE)
|
|
WHAT SHOWS THE VENTRICULAR DEPOLARIZATION ON THE EKG?
|
A LARGE COMPLEX OF THREE WAVES: THE Q, R, AND S WAVES
|
|
WHY IS THE QRS COMPLEX SIGNIFICANTLY LARGER THAN THE P WAVE?
|
BECAUSE VENTRICULAR DEPOLARIZATION INVOLVES GREATER MUSCLE MASS THAN ATRIAL DEPOLARIZATION
|
|
WHAT IS THE FIRST NEGATIVE DEFLECTION FOLLOWING THE P WAVE?
|
Q WAVE
|
|
WHAT IS THE FIRST POSITIVE DEFLECTION FOLLOWING THE P WAVE?
|
R WAVE
|
|
WHAT IS THE SECOND NEGATIVE DEFLECTION FOLLOWING THE P WAVE?
|
S WAVE
|
|
WHAT DOES THE QRS COMPLEX SIGNIFY?
|
VENTRICULAR DEPOLARIZATION
|
|
WHICH WAVE INDICATES VENTRICULAR REPOLARIZATION?
|
T WAVE
|
|
THE ATRIAL REPOLARIZATION WAVE IS USUALLY HIDDEN IN THE QRS COMPLEX WHY?
|
ATRIAL REPOLARIZATION NORMALLY OCCURS AT THE SAME TIME AS VENTRICULAR DEPOLARIZATION
|
|
FOR THE PR INTERVAL TO BE NORMAL, IT MUST BE BETWEEN ____ AND _____ SECONDS?
|
.12 AND .20 SECONDS
|
|
WHAT CONTRIBUTES TO A LONG PRI?
|
THE DELAY IN THE AV NODE, NOT THE P WAVE ITSELF
|
|
WHAT IS USUALLY CONSIDERED NORMAL RANGE FOR A QRS MEASUREMENT?
|
.06 TO .11 SECONDS
|
|
THE VENTRICLES ARE CONSIDERED TO HAVE TAKEN A NORMAL AMOUNT IF TIME TO DEPOLARIZE IF THEY DID IT IN LESS THAN HOW MANY SECONDS?
|
.12 SECONDS
|
|
WHAT CREATES THE COMPLEXES ON AN EKG TRACING?
|
THEY ARE CREATED BY ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY WITHIN THE HEART
|
|
SOME COMMON CAUSES OF INTERFERENCE OR ARTIFACT ON EKG ARE?
|
MUSCLE TREMORS, SHIVERING, PATIENT MOVEMENTS, LOOSE ELECTRODES, THE EFFECT OF OTHER ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT IN THE ROOM
|
|
THESE CAN CONFUSE YOU AND LEAD YOU TO BELIEVE THAT THE DEFLECTION ON AN EKG STRIP WAS CAUSED BY CARDIAC ACTIVITY WHEN IT WAS NOT
|
ARTIFACT
|
|
IF A CELL IS REFRACTORY, IT CANNOT ACCEPT AN IMPULSE BECAUSE IT IS NOT YET ____________.
|
REPOLARIZED
|
|
WHAT WAVES WOULD BE CONSIDERED THE REFRACTORY PERIOD OF THE CARDIAC CYCLE ON THE EKG?
|
THE QRS AND T WAVES BECAUSE THEY REPRESENT THE DEPOLARIZATION AND REPOLARIZATION OF THE VENTRICLES (HEART CANNOT RESPOND YET TO ANOTHER IMPULSE)
|
|
WHEN CAN PREMATURE DEPOLARIZATION OCCUR?
|
ONLY WHEN MOST OF THE CELL CHARGES ARE BACK TO THE ORIGINAL POSITION; CALLED RELATIVE REFRACTORY PERIOD B/C STRONG ENOUGH IMPULSE CAN CAUSE DEPOLARIZATION
|
|
WHAT IS THE ABSOLUTE REFRACTORY PERIOD?
|
WHEN NO IMPULSE CAN CAUSE DEPOLARIZATION
|
|
WHAT IS THE RELATIVE REFRACTORY PERIOD?
|
WHEN A STRONG IMPULSE CAN CAUSE A PREMATURE, ABNORMAL DISCHARGE
|
|
WHAT PART OF THE T WAVE IS CONSIDERED THE RELATIVE REFRACTORY PERIOD?
|
THE DOWNSLOPE OF THE T WAVE
|
|
WHAT ARE ELECTRODES?
|
DEVICES APPLIED TO THE SKIN TO DETECT ELECTRICAL ACTIVITY AND CONVEY IT TO A MACHINE FOR DISPLAY
|
|
WHAT IS A LEAD?
|
A SINGLE VIEW OF THE HEART, OFTEN PRODUCED BY A COMBINATION OF INFORMATION FROM SEVERAL ELECTRODES
|
|
HOW DO YOU MEASUE A PRI?
|
FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE P WAVE TO THE BEGINNING OF THE QRS COMPLEX
|
|
WHEN IS A CELL ELECTRICALLY REFRACTORY?
|
WHEN IT HAS NOT YET REPOLARIZED AND THUS CANNOT ACCEPT AND RESPOND TO ANOTHER STIMULUS
|
|
WHAT ARE THE ELECTRODE POSITIONS FOR LEAD II?
|
NEGATIVE ELECTRODE BELOW RIGHT CLAVICLE; POSITIVE ELECTRODE AT THE APEX; GROUND ELECTRODE BELOW THE RIGHT NIPPLE
|