Atrial Fibrillation
Rhythms
Medications
Cardiac Assessment/Chest Pain
Hypertension
100

These are 3 common causes of atrial fibrillation

What is age/genes, structural disease, SSS, HTN, COPD, PE, Sleep apnea, Hyperthyroid, Post surgical complications, ETOH/Drugs, electrolyte imbalance

100

This is the normal PR Interval

What is 0.12-0.20
100

This is the proper way to administer sublingual nitroglycerin

What is have the patient lay down, place under tongue, reassess pain, monitor vital signs

100

These are 4 causes of chest pain

What is: htn, arrhythmia, occlusion, vasospasm, PE, pulm disease, pneumonia, edema, muscle wall trauma, surgical incision, anxiety

100

This is the RRT criteria for blood pressure parameters

What is SBP <90 or >200

200

These are priority nursing interventions for a patient in NEW atrial fibrillation in the hospital setting

What is assessment, RRT, calling the provider, EKG

200

Longer, longer, longer drop

What is 'then you have a wenckebach'

200

This is why anticoagulation is so important for patients in atrial fibrillation

What is it prevents the production of blood clots that lead to DVT, stroke, cardiac arrest. 

200

Your patient is complaining of chest pain 4/10. This is your priority.

What is relieve the chest pain

200

This is the difference between hypertensive urgency and hypertensive emergency

What is 

1. hypertensive emergency: immediate lowering of blood pressure is mandatory to prevent further progression of target end organ damage.

2. Hypertensive urgency: blood pressure should be lowered within 24-48hrs to avoid organ damage

300

These are 2 of the main goals of treatment for a patient in atrial fibrillation

What is restore normal sinus rhythm and rate control
300

This rhythm is irregular and has no P waves

What is atrial fibrillation

300

When administering this medication, it is important to monitor potassium levels

What is furosemide

300

This lab value is elevated in someone who is having a NSTEMI

What is troponin

300

To be considered hypertensive crisis, the blood pressure must be greater than or equal to this number

What is >180/120

400

These are 3 treatment options available for a patient in atrial fibrillation (besides medications)

What is cardioversion, ablation, pacemaker, Watchman

400

This rhythm looks normal but does not generate a pulse

What is PEA

400

This is how beta blockers work on the heart to manage heart failure

What is they reverse the neurohormonal effects of the sympathetic nervous system-the fight or flight symptoms of increased heart rate and increased blood pressure.  Therefore they reduce the workload on the heart. 

400

This is a non invasive test that can be done to evaluate a patient that has chest pain

What is stress test

400

These are 3 CNS symptoms of hypertension

What are headache, seizures, confusion
500

These are things that happen to the heart during atrial fibrillation

What is the SA node is not functioning correctly, the atria quiver, there is a loss of effective contraction (atrial kick)-cardiac output decreases, blood pools in the atria leading to clot formation

500

These are symptoms of a patient in 3rd degree heart block

What is dizziness, fatigue, confusion

500

These are 4 classes of medications used to treat hypertensive emergency

What is: 

Angiotensin receptor blockers: valsartan

Thiazide diuretics: HCTZ, metolazone

Calcium channel blockers: amlodipine, nifedipine

Beta Blockers: Atenolol, metoprolol

500

These are 6 things that should be assessed when a patient complains of chest pain

What is onset and duration, character, location, severity, associated symptoms, treatment

500

Hypertensive emergencies can cause renal issues like:

What are increasing creatinine, decreased urine output, hematuria

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