Hi. Iโm Mark from ACLS Certification Institute. Welcome back to Rapid Algorithm Review. Today, tachycardia.
Now Iโll get into tachycardia rhythm. The first thing weโre looking for is the heart rate. Remember, tachycardia is any rate over 100, but in the ACLS algorithm, weโre looking for heart rates and pulses above 150.
Next, why is this patient tachycardic? Try to find a cause for this tachycardia. Begin supportive care: Maintain their airwayโdo we need to provide them an airway, do we need to bag the patient? Supply oxygen to the patient if theyโre hypoxic. Check and maintain their blood pressure. Get a 12-lead EKG. Start your supportive care.
Is this tachycardia causing shock, hypoperfusion, altered mental status, ischemic chest pain? If so, immediate synchronized cardioversion. Sedation would be okay as long as it didnโt hold up immediate synchronized cardioversion. Remember, unstable patient: electricity, synchronized cardioversion. Synchronized cardioversion for a regular narrow-complex tachycardia: 50 to 100 J. If itโs an irregular narrow-complex tachycardia, like an A-fib with a rapid ventricular response, youโre going to start your synchronized a little higher, maybe 120 to 200 J.
Assess is this tachycardia wide or narrow? Again, weโre looking at the width of the QRS. If itโs greater than 0.12 seconds, we call this a wide-complex tachycardia. If itโs equal or less than 0.12 seconds, itโs a narrow-complex tachycardia. For narrow-complex tachycardias, first drug up is adenosine 6 mg rapid IV push, followed by 20 cc syringe bolus of saline. We have to get that drug to the heart. We have to get it there quickly because the half-life of adenosine is only a few seconds. Remember, adenosine should only be used in regular rhythms, not any irregular tachycardias; but in regular tachycardias, adenosine would be appropriate. If adenosine doesnโt work, consider a calcium channel blocker and get an expert involved quickly. If this is a wide-complex tachycardia, our first drug up is amiodarone. Start an infusion of 150 mg over 10 minutes. Remember, stable tachycardias: drugs; unstable tachycardias: immediate synchronized cardioversion.
Rapid-fire review. First, heart rate over 150. Next, why are they tachycardic? Try to figure that out. Next, ABCs: airway (provide them an airway), oxygen, IV, monitor their oximetry, supportive care. Next, is the patient stable or unstable? If theyโre unstable and shocky, immediate synchronized cardioversion. It doesnโt matter if itโs narrow or wide, immediate synchronized cardioversion. If theyโre stable, is the complex wide or narrow? Narrow-complex, first drug up is adenosine 6 mg rapid IV push. Wide complex, amiodarone 150 mg over 10 minutes.
Iโm Mark for ACLS Certification Institute. This has been Rapid Algorithm Review for tachycardia. Iโll see you in the next algorithm.
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