The nurse is caring for a client with atrial fibrillation. What procedure would be recommended if drug therapies did not control the arrhythmia?
- A. Defibrillation
- B. Maze procedure
- C. Pacemaker implantation
- D. Elective cardioversion
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Atrial fibrillation is treated with elective cardioversion or digitalis if the ventricular rate is not too slow. Defibrillation is used for a ventricular problem. Maze procedures are used for clients who are not candidates for cardio diversion; these procedures use scar-forming techniques to eliminate rapid firing of ectopic pacemaker sites, thus restoring the normal conduction pathways in the atria. A Maze procedure might be considered for this client only after determining ineligibility for cardiodiversion. Pacemakers are implanted for bradycardia.
You may also like to solve these questions
The nurse and student nurse are observing a cardioversion procedure. The nurse is correct to tell the student that electrical current will be initiated at which time?
- A. During stimulation of the SA node
- B. During repolarization of the heart
- C. During ventricular depolarization
- D. During the contraction phase
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The electrical current is initiated at the R wave when ventricular depolarization occurs. The electrical current completely depolarizes the entire myocardium with the goal of restoring the normal pacemaker of the heart.
Elective cardioversion is similar to defibrillation except that the electrical stimulation waits to discharge until an R wave appears. What does this prevent?
- A. Disrupting the heart during the critical period of atrial repolarization
- B. Disrupting the heart during the critical period of ventricular repolarization
- C. Disrupting the heart during the critical period of ventricular depolarization
- D. Disrupting the heart during the critical period of atrial depolarization
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: It is similar to defibrillation. One difference is that the machine that delivers the electrical stimulation waits to discharge until it senses the appearance of an R wave. By doing so, the machine prevents disrupting the heart during the critical period of ventricular repolarization.
The nurse is caring for clients on a telemetry unit. Which nursing consideration best represents concerns of altered rhythmic patterns of the heart?
- A. Altered patterns frequently turn into life-threatening arrhythmias.
- B. Altered patterns frequently produce neurological deficits.
- C. Altered patterns frequently cause a variety of home safety issues.
- D. Altered patterns frequently affect the heart's ability to pump blood effectively.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The best representation of a nursing concern related to a cardiac arrhythmia is the inability of the heart to fill the chambers and eject blood flow efficiently. Lack of an efficient method to circulate blood and bodily fluids produces a variety of complications such as tissue ischemia, pulmonary edema, hypotension, decreased urine output, and impaired level of consciousness. The other options can occur with arrhythmias, but the cause stemming from the altered pattern is the best answer.
Which of the following does the nurse recognize as the therapeutic goal of radiofrequency catheter ablation for a client with cardiac arrhythmias?
- A. Reperfusion of ischemic heart tissue
- B. Dilation of arterial blood vessels
- C. Destruction of errant tissue
- D. Stimulation of the impulse center
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The therapeutic goal of radiofrequency catheter ablation is to destroy errant tissue, in hopes of allowing impulse conduction to travel over appropriate pathways. The goal does not include dilation of blood vessels or reperfusion of heart tissue. There is no stimulation of the heart.
A client presents to the emergency department via ambulance with a heart rate of 210 beats/minute and a sawtooth waveform pattern per cardiac monitor. The nurse is most correct to alert the medical team of the presence of a client with which disorder?
- A. Asystole
- B. Premature ventricular contraction
- C. Atrial flutter
- D. Ventricular fibrillation
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Atrial flutter is a disorder in which a single atrial impulse outside the SA node causes the atria to contract at an exceedingly rapid rate. The atrioventricular (AV) node conducts only some impulses to the ventricle, resulting in a ventricular rate slower than the atrial rate, thus forming a sawtooth pattern on the heart monitor. Asystole is the absence of cardiac function and can indicate death. Premature ventricular contraction indicates an early electric impulse and does not necessarily produce an exceedingly rapid heart rate. Ventricular fibrillation is the inefficient quivering of the ventricles and indicative of a dying heart.
Nokea