Initial dose is 2J/kg, secondary dose is 4J/kg
What is pediatric defibrillation
Blood passes through these while traveling between the right ventricle & left atrium
What are the lungs?
Pulseless V-Tach
What is defibrillation, 200J?
Primary pace maker in the heart
What is the SA Node?
The three primary coronary arteries
What is the RCA, Circumflex & LAD?
Last dose is 12mg over 1-2 seconds
What is adenosine?
In the series of valves that blood passes through in the heart, this is the second
What is pulmonary?
Symptomatic, stable SVT
What is Adenosine, 6mg?
The three primary electrical pathways within the heart
RBB, LAF, LPF
ST Elevation found here should prompt you to "keep digging" for further/additional infarction
What are leads II, III & aVf (Inferior)?
Repeat dose is 150mg/100mL
What is Amiodarone?
Approximately 75% of blood is "gravity" filled into this heart chamber during a normal cycle
What is the right ventricle?
Unstable, A-Fib RVR
What is electrical cardioversion, 120-200J?
The "widow maker" occurs when a thrombus forms here
What is proximal to the bifurcation of the LAD/Circumflex?
Initial dose is 100J
What is electrical cardioversion of wide complex, regular tachycardia (adult)
The term for the amount of blood left in the right ventricle following depolarization
What is preload?
Symptomatic, stable V-Tach
What is Amiodarone 150mg/100ml D5 over 10 minutes?
Right axis deviation equals an electrical blockage here
What is the left posterior fascicle?
What are leads I & aVL?
0.25mg/kg
What is Cardizem?
This is the order of the four main valves utilized in blood flow through the heart
What is Tricuspid, Pulmonary, Mitral, Aortic
Unstable SVT
What is electrical cardioversion, 50-100J?
A LBBB is considered this, in & of itself
What is a bi-fascicular block?
New AHA guidelines have grouped all of these leads as now "contiguous"