»
S
I
D
E
B
A
R
«
Pediatric EKG Differences
Jul 19th, 2010 by RH-111
Print This Post Print This Post

I came across this great article focusing on ECG differences seen with pediatric patients. This is quite important to really know as something as simple as a normal PR interval for an adult could signify a AV block in a child.

Electrocardiogram (ECG) interpretation usually is taught in courses that focus on adults. For those who work in pediatrics, identifying appropriate parameters for infants and children is important. This article focuses on the differences between an adult and child’s ECG, differences in common arrhythmias (also called dysrhythmias), and unique treatment approaches to arrhythmias in children.

See complete article here: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FSZ/is_3_27/ai_n18612073/

 

This chart sums some of it up:

Table 2. Rate and Intervals Based on Age

Age                HR       PR interval   QRS interval

1 - 3 weeks     100 - 180    .07 - .14     .03 - .07
1 - 6 months    100 - 185    .07 - .16     .03 - .07
6 - 12 months   100 - 170    .08 - .16     .03 - .08
1 - 3 years     90 - 150     .09 - .16     .03 - .08
3 - 5 years     70 - 140     .09 - .16     .03 - .08
5 - 8 years     65 - 130     .09 - .16     .03 - .08
8 - 12 years    60 - 110     .09 - .16     .03 - .09
12 - 16 years   60 - 100     .09 - .18     .03 - .09

Paramedic Golden Rules
Jan 12th, 2010 by RH-111
Print This Post Print This Post

By Miguel

 

"This is why people fail exams and/or lose their certifications"

Rule #1: BLS before ALS.

Rule #2: Treat your patient not the monitor.

Rule #3: An ‘excellent’ EMT = a ‘good’ medic.

Rule #4: Protocols are guidelines, not set in stone.

Rule #5: Refrain from getting tunnel vision.

 

Never forget:

1) ABC DEFG (airway, breathing, circulation, disabilities, extremities, full vitals, GO).

2) IPASSO (inspect, palpate, auscultate, stabilize, seal, O2).

3) OPQRSTI (onset, provocations, quality, radiation, severity, time, interventions).

4) SAMPLE (signs/symptoms, allergies, medications, past hx, last intake, events).

5) Pertinent questions regarding call: ex: weight, LMP, PARA, Gravada, drug consumption, Etoh, smoking, etc.

* Head to toe assessment *

** approximately 40 questions before you begin ALS, unless the call is obvious **

 

Rookie Mistakes:

#1 Uses monitor for everything.

#2 Every call becomes ALS.

#3 Every chest pain is cardiac.

#4 Every patient gets an IV.

 

** don’t go by what the EMT’s tell you **

***Become a Clinician***

»  Substance: WordPress   »  Style: Ahren Ahimsa