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Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

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Page 1: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Cardiovascular SystemAssessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests

Practicum 1 2011-2012

Page 2: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

A & P Review

Page 3: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012
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Layers of the Heart

Page 6: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Conduction

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Conduction Rate

• SA Node: 60-100 times a minute• AV Node: 40-60 times a minute• Bundle of His: 40-60 times a minute• AV Node and Bundle of His are often referred

to as AV junction or just the junction and all above considered supraventricular rhythms.

Page 8: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012
Page 9: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Conduction Rates

• If all supraventricular pacer nodes fail, the right and left bundle branches and Purkinje fibers will attempt to pace the ventricles at a rate 20-40 times a minute. Essentially the ventricles will try to pace themselves.

Page 10: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Assessment

• First and most important assessment skill is listening to your patient. Listen to what they are complaining of (pain, dizziness, swelling, etc).

• Take a complete history. Include previous medical problems, surgery, family history, smoking, medications.

• Review any previous charts and prescriptions.

Page 11: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Inspection

• Look at your patient closely….WITH YOUR OWN EYES. You may see something someone else missed.

• Look at lifts, pulsations, neck vein distention, skin color, nail beds, scars, medical ID bracelets, swelling, facial expression, body position.

Page 12: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Vital Signs

• Pulse A. Regularity B. Rate (Too fast? Too slow?) C. Strength (bounding, strong, weak, thready,

absent.*If too weak or unable to palpate, use a doppler.

Page 13: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Doppler

Page 14: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Doppler

Page 15: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Point of maximal impulse (PMI)

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PMI

Page 17: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Blood Pressure

Page 18: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Blood Pressure

Page 19: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Blood Pressure

• Measured with a sphygmomanometer.• Cuff is inflated until pressure is sufficient to stop blood

flow, then is slowly released and the person taking the reading uses a stethoscope to listen at the pulse point.

• The first time a sound is heard a reading is recorded. This is systole which is the sound of the ventricle contracting. The sound gets progressively louder and then a change occurs from loud to soft. That change is recorded at the diastolic pressure (when the ventricles relax and the heart fills.

Page 20: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Blood Pressure

• Normal Adult Blood Pressure is considered 120/80 mm Hg. the stress resulting from the elongation of an elastic body

• Tension is the stress resulting from the elongation or stretching of an elastic body (artery wall).

• Normotension: Normal blood pressure.• Hypotensive: Abnormally low blood pressure.• Hypertensive: Abnormally high blood pressure.

Page 21: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Orthostatic (Postural) Hypotension

• A person who experiences a drop in blood pressure (greater than 20mm Hg systolic or 10mm Hg diastolic) when the person stands up from a sitting position.

Page 22: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Orthostatic Hypotension• Normal when a person stands, gravity causes the blood to pool in

the person’s legs and decrease the circulating volume. Baroreceptors near the heart and neck respond to the drop in blood pressure by speeding up the heart rate or vasoconstricting the blood vessels.

• Causes might be damage to the receptors (Parkinson’s or diabetes), heart problems, or low circulating volume (dehydration).

• Treatment: Sit down, get up slowly, TED hose, treat underlying cause.

• Nursing considerations: YOU MIGHT WANT TO SET THE BED ALARM FOR THESE PATIENTS and also place them on fall precautions. Frequent monitoring of these patients.

Page 23: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Auscultation

Page 24: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Auscultation

• The act of listen to sounds arising within the body (usually with a stethoscope).

• From the latin word auscultation which means the act of listening.

• Auris means ear.

Page 25: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Auricle: External Ear

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Auricle of the heart

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Auricles

• Right has been associated with tachycardias.• Left has been correlated with atrial fibrillation

and blood clots. The left is a reservoir for the left atrium.

Page 28: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Auscultation

• Bell of stethoscope is better for hearing high pitched sounds like S1 and S2. (Lub-Dub).

• S1 is closure of mitral and tricuspid valves and ventricular contraction.

• S2 is closure of pulmonic and aortic valves.

Page 29: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Heart

Page 30: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG)

• Recording of patient’s heart rhythm. Continuous monitoring in hospitals is called telemetry (electronic transmission of data-tele/o means distant). In acute care areas (ICU, ED, OR, PACU) patients are placed on continuous heart monitors at the bedside.

• A Holter monitor is an ECG device that is worn during a 24-hour period to detect rhythm changes and symptoms are recorded in a diary.

Page 31: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012
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5 lead

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12 lead

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12 ECG Machine

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24 Hour Holter Monitor

Page 36: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Stress Test

• Patient is placed on continuous ecg monitoring and put on treadmill and monitors heart’s response to exertion (stress).

Page 37: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Telemetry (Tele)

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Echocardiography (ECHO)

• Echoes generated by high-frequency sound waves produce images of the heart.

• Shows movements and structures of the heart as well as blood flow and abnormalities.

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Doppler Ultrasound Studies

• Sound waves measure movement of blood flow.

• Echoes bounce off red blood cells.• The examiner can hear various alterations in

blood flow caused by vessel obstruction.• Used to detect carotid artery occlusion,

aneurysms, varicose veins, blood clots.

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Page 43: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Angiography

• X-ray imaging of blood vessels after injection of contrast material.

Page 44: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Computerized Tomography Angiography (CTA)

• Three-dimensional x-ray images of the heart and coronary arteries using computed tomography (CT). This new technology take 192 images of the heart per second. Cross-sectional images are assembled into 3D picture. Less invasive than angiography.

Page 45: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Cardiac Catheterization

• A thin, flexible tube is guided into the heart via a vein or an artery.

• This procedure detects pressures and patterns of blood flow in the heart.

• Contrast may be injected and x-ray images taken of the heart and blood vessels.

Page 46: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012
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Page 48: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

CXR

• A radiology image of the chest (basically a picture).

• Generally done from 2 views (back and side).

Page 49: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Abnormal CXR

Page 50: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Laboratory Tests

• Cardiac Enzymes• Lipid Panels• BNP

Page 51: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Cardiac Enzymes

• Cardiac enzymes are proteins from heart muscle cells that are released into the bloodstream when heart muscle is damaged, such as during a myocardial infarction (MI). By measuring blood levels of cardiac enzymes, doctors can tell whether heart muscle damage has recently occurred.

• Usually three sets of CE are drawn about every six hours. Cardiac enzymes include CK, CK-MB, Troponin.

Page 52: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

Lipid Panels

• Measurement of fats and lipoproteins (fats and protein combo) to help determine the risk of coronary heart disease.

• Includes total cholesterol, LDL (low-density lipoprotein) “bad”, HDL (high-density lipoprotein) “good”, and triglyceride.

Page 53: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012

BNP (brain natriuretic peptide)

• Measure the amount of BNP hormone in your blood. It is secreted when the heart becomes overloaded. It acts as a diuretic to help the heart function return to normal.

• It is seen in patients with heart failure (CHF, cardiac arrest, etc).

Page 54: Cardiovascular System Assessment, Diagnostic Tests, and Lab Tests Practicum 1 2011-2012