Diferencia entre revisiones de «ACLS (Main)»
| Línea 82: | Línea 82: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Poisoning]]|| | | [[Poisoning]]|| | ||
*[[Alcohol abuse]], bizarre or puzzling behavioral or metabolic presentation, classic toxicologic syndrome, occupational or industrial exposure, and psychiatric disease | *[[Alcohol abuse]], bizarre or puzzling behavioral or metabolic presentation, classic [[toxicologic syndrome]], occupational or industrial exposure, and psychiatric disease | ||
|| | || | ||
*Consult toxicologist for emergency advice on resuscitation and definitive care, including appropriate antidote | *Consult toxicologist for emergency advice on resuscitation and definitive care, including appropriate antidote | ||
| Línea 90: | Línea 90: | ||
*[[Metabolic acidosis]], excessive administration of potassium, [[drugs and toxins]], vigorous exercise, hemolysis, renal disease, [[rhabdomyolysis]], [[tumor lysis syndrome]], and clinically significant tissue injury | *[[Metabolic acidosis]], excessive administration of potassium, [[drugs and toxins]], vigorous exercise, hemolysis, renal disease, [[rhabdomyolysis]], [[tumor lysis syndrome]], and clinically significant tissue injury | ||
|| | || | ||
*If hyperkalemia is identified or strongly suspected, treat with all of the following: 10% calcium chloride (5-10 mL by slow intravenous push; do not use if hyperkalemia is secondary to digitalis poisoning), glucose and insulin (50 mL of 50% dextrose in water and 10 units of regular insulin intravenously), sodium bicarbonate (50 mmoL intravenously; most effective if concomitant metabolic acidosis is present), and albuterol (15-20mg nebulized or 0.5mg by intravenous infusion) | *If hyperkalemia is identified or strongly suspected, treat with all of the following: 10% [[calcium chloride]] (5-10 mL by slow intravenous push; do not use if hyperkalemia is secondary to [[digitalis poisoning]]), [[glucose]] and [[insulin]] (50 mL of 50% dextrose in water and 10 units of regular insulin intravenously), [[sodium bicarbonate]] (50 mmoL intravenously; most effective if concomitant [[metabolic acidosis]] is present), and [[albuterol]] (15-20mg nebulized or 0.5mg by intravenous infusion) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Hypokalemia]]|| | | [[Hypokalemia]]|| | ||
Revisión del 20:56 14 jun 2023
See critical care quick reference for drug doses and equipment size by weight. This page is for adult patients. For pediatric patients, see: PALS (Main).
Background
- A series of clinical algorithms created by the AHA/ASA used in the treatment of cardiovascular/neurological emergencies.
- Involves airway management, IV access, and ECG interpretation.
ECG Analysis
- What is the atrial and ventricular rate?
- Is the rhythm regular or irregular?
- If irregular, does it follow any repeatable pattern?
- What is the axis?
- ERAD often seen in VT but not SVT
- What is the P wave amplitude, duration, morphology, and synchrony with QRS complex?
- Is the P wave positive in Lead II
- What is the QRS complex amplitude, duration, morphology?
- What is the T wave amplitude, duration, morphology?
- Is the T wave positive in Lead II
- What is the length of PR and QT intervals?
- Is there ST Elevation/Depression or Hyperacute T waves?
- If yes, does it follow any anatomical pattern or is it diffuse?
- Is there anything else abnormal about this ECG?
- Pacemaker Spikes
- Hypertrophy of atrial/ventricles
Algorithms
- Adult Pulseless Arrest
- Pulseless Ventricular Tachycardia/Ventricular Fibrillation
- Pulseless Electrical Activity/Asystole
- Cardiac Arrest In Pregnancy
- Adult Post-Cardiac Arrest Care
- Termination of Resuscitation
- ACLS: Bradycardia (with pulse)
- ACLS: Tachycardia (with pulse)
- Acute coronary syndrome
- Suspected cerebrovascular event
Treatable Conditions
| Condition | Common clinical settings | Corrective actions |
| Acidosis |
|
|
| Cardiac tamponade |
|
|
| Hypothermia |
|
|
| Hypovolemia, hemorrhage, anemia |
| |
| Hypoxia |
|
|
| Hypomagnesemia |
|
|
| Myocardial infarction |
|
|
| Poisoning |
|
|
| Hyperkalemia |
|
|
| Hypokalemia |
|
|
| Pulmonary embolism |
|
|
| Tension pneumothorax |
|
|
See Also
- AHA ACLS Recommendation Changes by Year
- ACLS (Treatable Conditions)
- BLS (Main)
- Critical care quick reference
- Post cardiac arrest
- PALS (Main)
External Links
- 2020 AHA Guidelines
- Numose EMed: The Pulseless Patient
- Numose EMed: ACLS Bradycardia
- Numose EMed: ACLS Narrow Complex Tachycardia
- Numose EMed: ACLS Wide Complex Tachycardia
