I was trending the other night on a patient that I was informed had afib, but it didn't look quite right to me. I'm not amazing at reading tele -- I've only been a nurse since October -- but the occasional bursts of "afib" looked like a heart block to me b/c I thought I saw three distinct P waves that clocked out and a space where a Q wave should have been. I grabbed a more experienced nurse and she agreed with me, saying that she thought it was Mobitz Type I. I charted it as such even though the more experienced nurse before me had charted it as afib and the pt was being treated for afib with an amiodorone gtt.
Should I have just written down what the more experienced nurse had, since I'm still not very good at reading tele?
Also, would amiodorone hurt a pt if he actually has a heart block and not afib?
I discovered this right before report, so I passed on the two different tele readings to the nurse coming on. I'm just want to know to satisfy my own curiosity.
Oh, one last question. How low of a heart rate is "too low" with a patient on an amiodorone gtt when the MD already knows that the patient tends to stay in the 50s normally with occasional jumps into rates as high as the 150s? I must admit that the darn drug makes me really nervous, esp. since that night was the first night I ever started an amiodorone gtt on someone.
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I was trending the other night on a patient that I was informed had afib, but it didn't look quite right to me. I'm not amazing at reading tele -- I've only been a nurse since October -- but the occasional bursts of "afib" looked like a heart block to me b/c I thought I saw three distinct P waves that clocked out and a space where a Q wave should have been. I grabbed a more experienced nurse and she agreed with me, saying that she thought it was Mobitz Type I. I charted it as such even though the more experienced nurse before me had charted it as afib and the pt was being treated for afib with an amiodorone gtt.
Should I have just written down what the more experienced nurse had, since I'm still not very good at reading tele?
Also, would amiodorone hurt a pt if he actually has a heart block and not afib?
I discovered this right before report, so I passed on the two different tele readings to the nurse coming on. I'm just want to know to satisfy my own curiosity.
Oh, one last question. How low of a heart rate is "too low" with a patient on an amiodorone gtt when the MD already knows that the patient tends to stay in the 50s normally with occasional jumps into rates as high as the 150s? I must admit that the darn drug makes me really nervous, esp. since that night was the first night I ever started an amiodorone gtt on someone.