Cardiac Arrhythmias


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     Sinus Bradycardia
     Sinus Tachycardia
     Atrial Flutter
     Atrial Fibrillation
     Ventricular Tachycardia
     Ventricular Fibrillation
     Wolff-Parkinson-White
  Myocardial Infraction
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Atrial Flutter

Atrial flutter occurs when the atria are stimulated to contract at 200-350 beats per minute usually because electrical impulses are traveling in a circular fashion around and around the atria. Often the impulses are traveling around an obstacle like the mitral valve, tricuspid valve or the openings of the superior or inferior vena cava.
 
The atrial flutter waves, known as F waves, are observed. F waves are larger than normal P waves and they have a saw-toothed waveform. Not every atrial flutter wave results in a QRS complex (ventricular depolarization) because the AV node acts as a filter. Some flutter waves reach the AV node when it is refractory and thus are not propagated to the ventricles. The ventricular rate is usually regular but slower than the atrial rate. A whole number fixed ratio of flutter waves to QRS complexes can be observed, for instance 2:1, 3:1 or 4:1.

The EKG on the top shows normal sinus rhythm. The EKG at the bottom shows atrial flutter

 
Atrial flutter is usually associated with mitral valve disease, pulmonary embolism, thoracic surgery, hypoxia, electrolyte disturbances and hypercalcaemia. Atrial flutter results in poor atrial pumping since some parts of the atria are relaxing while other parts are contracting. Cardiac output decreases because the ventricles do sufficiently fill (as they would normally) before ventricular contraction. Ablation of some of the heart tissue to stop impulses from traveling around can be used to treat this condition

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