Re: afib/bundle branch block
THats such a good topic! Glasgow's right in that the patient has a known history of wide-qrs and a-fib so the monitor shouldn't bother you if it says 'pvc's or v-tach'.
The main way the monitor 'senses' pvc's/v-tach is by measuring the qrs width, so you'll see monitors mis-interpreting Bundle-branch-blocks all the time as v-tach or pvc's.... (yet another reason not to rely on machines...)
So... you know he has a-fib with BBB which is very helpful. The best way to differentiate (in this patient) by TELEMETRY if he's actually having runs of V-tach (rather than his baseling a-fib w/BBB) is to keep the leads in II and MCL (if 5 lead), or lead II if 3-lead. When you suspect V-tach, compare his bundle with an earlier base-line bundle. A simple way to differentiate is if the bundles have flipped (basically meaning upside down) or changed shaped drastically. If so, it COULD be v-tach. Also, in a patient with a significant cardiac history (he obviously does), V-tach will MOST LIKELY cause symptoms and he'll 'feel it'. (hypotension, dizzines, palpitations, etc.)...so you have to take that into consideration as well.
Another spin on this is that a person with a-fib and BBB can have a abberant (sp?) conduction...which means his bundle can periodically flip and/or change shape..but it's still a-fib!...making this mess MUCH harder to differentiate. Even on 12-lead, abberent a-fib with bbb, or fast a-fib w/bbb can be misinterpreted as V-tach. These patients can be frustrating!!
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(off the subject)The reason i'm interested in this issue is because there's been a debate among some of the icu-nurses where i work...
A common practice is that when a floor-nurse calls a code, or a 'Rapid Response' they'll apply defib-pads, (which many times is set at AED-mode). NOw, an AED that's seeeing a fast a-fib w/BBB can (just like more elaborate tele machines!) interpret this as v-tach and you'll get the AED-computer voice saying 'shock advized...charging..!, etc. Of course no-ones been inadvertantly defibrillated unneccesarily (where i work)...but there's always someone who hits the lottery... (sorry for the ramble!)..
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