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100

An EKG application used to evaluate how the heart functions under controlled. Stress created either by exercise or medications (pharmacologic stress test) ; also called exercise stress test, exercise tolerance test and treadmill test

Stress test

100

A common type of electrocardiogram that records the electrical activity of the heart in 12 different directions                ( leads )

12-lead EKG 

100

A type of ambulatory monitor that detects heart rate or rhythm irregularities automatically and transmits data to a healthcare professional when an irregularities occurs

Mobile cardiac telemetry 

100

A type of ambulatory monitor that records heart rate and rhythm when the patient indicates that she is experiencing symptoms.

Event monitor 

100

A type of ambulatory monitor that allows a doctor to evaluate heart rate and rhythm over an extended period of time (usually 24-48 hours) while the patient continues with normal life.

Holter monitor 

200

A type of EKG technology that can record or monitor a patient's heart rate and rhythm over an extended period while the patient continues with normal life; holter, event, and mobile telemetry monitors are examples.

Ambulatory monitor 

200

A application of EKG technology that allows continual monitoring of a patient heart rate and rhythm; often used in an emergency room or hospital setting 

Telemetry 

200

Difference in electrical charge

Voltage 

200

A test that uses sound waves to visualize the heart ; provides information about the mechanical function of the heart

Echocardiogram 

200

Record of the electrical activity of a patients  heart during a electrocardiogram as a recorded by an EKG machine; also called EKG strip or rhythm strip 

EKG tracing 

300

In a EKG an imaginary the lines between two electrodes attached to the patient; each lead can produce a different EKG tracing and a different view of the hearts electrical activity 

Leads

300

Wires that connect electrodes placed on a patients body to an EKG machine; also called lead wires or electrodes 

Leads wires

300

In EKG technology, pads that conduct electricity and are connected to the patient's body and to electrodes cables to conduct electrical signals from the heart to the EKG machine 

Electrodes 

300

An electrical change in the heart in which the voltage of the cells become more negative and the cells relax

Repolarization 

300

An electrical change in the heart in which the voltage of the cells becomes more positive and the cells contract

Depolarization 

400

A rare heart condition that causes the heart to develop to the right side of the chest instead of the left side 

Dextrocardia

400

EKG artifact that occurs when signal is compromised by frayed or faulty lead wires 

Broken recording 

400

In electrocardiography, a 12 second recording of the activity in ii on an EKG tracing 

Rhythm strip

400

In electrocardiography, the lead group made up of leads I, II and III; also known as bipolar leads

Limb leads

400

The imaginary triangle formed by the placement of the electrodes that records the limb leads

Einthoven's Triangle

500

In electrocardiography, the unipolar lead grouped composed leads V1,V2 V3 v4 v5 v6 also know as the chest leads

Precordial leads

500

In electrocardiography, leads that measure voltage at an electrical positive poll in comparison to a neutral reference point

Unipolar leads 

500

In electrocardiography, the collective name for leads AVR, AVL and AVF

Augmented limb leads

500

The center of Einthoven triangle ; acts as an electrically neutral point of reference for the precordial ( chest ) leads 

Wilson Central Terminal

500

An electrocardiography, inference or distortion that appears on a tracing 

Artifact


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