Anatomy & Physiology
Cardiovascular Diseases & Disorders
EKG Procedures
Rhythms Part 1
Rhythms Part 2
100

Imaginary line parallel to the midline and passing through the midpoint of the collar bone on the anterior (front) surface of the body

Midclavicular line 

100

The heart disorder when patient is experiencing the following symptoms angina, diaphoresis, nausea, dyspnea, pain radiating to the arm

Myocardial infarction (heart attack)

100

Precordial leads

What are leads V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6? 

Also known as chest leads

100

P wave that shows ___ depolarization

atrial

100

The heart rate and P wave characteristics for sinus bradycardia?

What is <60 bpm and upright and uniform P waves?

200

Formed elements make up about what percentage of blood volume?

What makes up the formed elements?

What is 45%

What are erythrocytes, leukocytes, thrombocytes?

200

The plaque damages the inner lining of the vessel wall 

What is atherosclerosis

200

The lead that is placed in the fifth intercostal space in the midclavicular line

V4

200

The wave that comes after the QRS complex and shows the ventricular repolarization

What is the T wave?

200

Name all of the lethal rhythms

What are idioventricular rhythm, ventricular tachycardia, venticular fibrillation, and asytole

300

The thin, outermost connective tissue that protects the heart 

Epicardium 

300

Cardiac Arrest

What is when a patient has total loss of heart function?

300

Standard height of the calibration box (measurement in small boxes)

What is 10mm high, 5mm across

300

Normal range for PR interval

What is 0.12-0.20 seconds?

300

Name the rhythm

Rate: 150-250 bpm

Rhythm pattern: Regular

P wave characteristics: Difficult or impossible to see

PR interval: Not measurable

What is supraventricular tachycardia?

400

Capillaries

What are very small blood vessels where oxygen and CO2 exchanges are made?

400

A blood clot forms in the veins forms in the veins of the legs, or sometimes pelvis or arms

What is deep vein thrombosis (DVT)?

400

The reference point where positive input from each of the chest electrodes come together 

Wilson's central terminal 

400

Name the rhythm 


What is tachycardia sinus rhythm?


400

Name the rhythm

P wave absent, QRS wide and bizarre, rate: 40-100bpm

What is accelerated idioventricular rhythm?

500

Pathway of blood flow through the heart

Vena cava (superior and inferior) > right atrium > tricuspid valve > right ventricle > pulmonary semilunar valve > pulmonary artery > lungs > pulmonary vein> left atrium > mitral valve > left ventricle > aortic valve > aorta > body

500

Symptoms of cerbrovascular accident (CVA)

What is aphasia (difficulty speaking), confusion, hemiparesis (weakness in one side of the body), hemiplegia (paralysis of one side of the body), facial droop, sudden severe headache, dizziness, vision changes

500

The measurements of Lead I, Lead II, Lead III (identify the pole and limbs)

What is 

- Lead I measures the voltage between left arm electrode (positive pole) and right arm electrode (neg pole)

- Lead II measures the voltage between the left leg electrode (positive) and the right arm electrode (negative)

- Lead III measures the voltage between the left leg electrode (positive) and left arm electrode (negative)

500

Name the rhythm

Rate: 100-150 bpm

Rhythm pattern: Regular

P wave characteristics: Inverted or absent; may be before, during, or after QRS

What is junctional tachycardia?

500

Name the rhythm 

Rate: 55 bpm

Rhythm: Every third beat is early but the underlying rhythm is regular 

Irregular QRS complex is early, wide, bizarre 

What is premature ventricular complexes (PVCs) trigeminal with underlying sinus bradycardia?