Originally Posted by poppy07
how do you determine the CVP yourself? Our monitor shows a crappy wave form and a number, that's it. By the way, how should the CVP waveform actually look?
When the patient is positioned per policy either at 30 degrees up of flat, and the transducer is leveled and zeroed, print a strip of respirations and the cvp, at end expiration, look at your scale, which should be in optimal mode, or conducive to the #'s and manually look at the scale on the strip and "see" the CVP number then.
there is much more to reading the waves, but this is a basic start, all pathology of the patients heart aside. Master this, then read a critical care book about what the bumps or waves really mean. Going into cannon waves and what not will not help you at this initial point with your question, but there is much more to learn to get accurate readings.
Great question!