Pacemakers for the ER Physician

Pacemakers

Or, like, the most complicated things ever 

Holy fish-balls, these things are crazy complicated.

 

Lucky for you all, I have no life – AND DESPITE THIS ENTIRE DOCUMENT ALREADY HAVING BEEN DELETED ONCE – I have (re)gone through a ton of resources to help you, a baller-life-saving-ER-provider, make some sense of these damn things.

 

We’re going to go over WHY people get pacemakers, WHAT they actually are, HOW they work (barely), and their corresponding EKGs.

 

If I haven’t thrown my computer out the window, we’ll cover just a couple of pacemaker-malfunction emergencies.

 

Let’s get started.

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CHAPTER 3:

Pacemaker EKGs

EKG#1 - Atrial Pacing

o Note the tiny lines, or “pacer spikes,” on the EKG that precede P waveso The pacemaker is triggering atrial beats, depolarizing the atria – the current continues down and appears to depolarize the ventricles through the normal conduction pathwayo …

o Note the tiny lines, or “pacer spikes,” on the EKG that precede P waves

o The pacemaker is triggering atrial beats, depolarizing the atria – the current continues down and appears to depolarize the ventricles through the normal conduction pathway

o This patient may still have a dual chamber pacemaker, but only requires atrial pacing during this EKG

EKG#2 - Ventricular Pacing

o Like we talked about above, the pacing lead is in the RV – the left ventricle relies on the current from the RV, so it looks like a LBBBo Use modified Sgarbossa, but know that it is not perfect in these patients

o Like we talked about above, the pacing lead is in the RV – the left ventricle relies on the current from the RV, so it looks like a LBBB

o Use modified Sgarbossa, but know that it is not perfect in these patients

EKG#3 - Dual Chamber Pacing

o This patient is having their atria and ventricles triggered by separate impulses

o This patient is having their atria and ventricles triggered by separate impulses

EKG#4 - Bi-Ventricular Pacing

o   I’m not going to give you an EKG for this one – in theory you have a RBBB combined with a LBBB, but the patterns are highly variable and non-essential for your knowledge

o   Just know you can have two spikes in a QRS… or not…

o   If it looks like LBBB, treat it like LBBB

 

CHAPTER 4:

Pacemaker-Malfunction Emergencies

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