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Yes you can, you just have to place your pads alternatively if they happen to have placed the AICD around the right clavicle area. Possible positions could be: anterior/posterior directly above the heart (the pacing position), left clavicle right base position.
If they placed the AICD in the left clavicle area (most often in my experience) you can use the classic position of your pads safely.
But of course if you need an AED for your AICD patient there is obviously something wrong ^^.
A good tip: what I generally do when a patiënt has a port-a-cath, pacemaker or AICD I place a bandaid over it and mark it with a permanent marker: PAC, PM, AICD. So in the heat of battle people know to use alternative placement, or don't spend minutes getting vascular acces when there is a PAC available. Of course outside of the hospital that's not as practical :)
In short- yes.
The ICD is surgically implanted into a person to deliver electricity to the heart when it detects it as fast- VF or VT (most new ones also recognise and interviene with other arrhythmias).
The AED is placed onto a person to identify VF or VT, and then give a shock.
Discussion- If the ICD is not doing its job, malfunctioning?, you should use the AED to keep the patient alive. I work in Australia and our current Advanced Life support guidelines suggest not putting the pads within 8cm of any implantable device (ie an ICD) as it may cause burns.
Not sure about the equiptment where you work, but we use a manual cardiac monitor/defib like a 'lifepak 15' (as apposed to an AED) to identify the rhythms ourselves to carry out defib, pacing, cardioversion.
I've seen one where the settings really needed to be adjusted. Pt was having frequent runs of paroxysmal v-tach and the settings were such that he wasn't getting shocked. Scared the crap out of us that night! Runs so long and frequent it was pretty much his "normal" rhythm and he was completely asymptomatic! Hope I never see anything like it ever again!
I've seen one where the settings really needed to be adjusted. Pt was having frequent runs of paroxysmal v-tach and the settings were such that he wasn't getting shocked. Scared the crap out of us that night! Runs so long and frequent it was pretty much his "normal" rhythm and he was completely asymptomatic! Hope I never see anything like it ever again!
Perhaps it was for the best the AICD didn't shock if he was asymptomatic. I've seen patients on numerous occasions cry and ask us to please make the shocking stop if the AICD started misfiring or firing on rhythms that remained hemodynamically stable.
sarabellum1
54 Posts
Can you use an AED on a patient with an ICD? I'm a nursing student and can't find info on this in any of my books. Need help from all you experienced Cardio nurses please!! Thank you in advance