In ancient Greece, the asclepion was a healing temple dedicated to Asclepius, the God of Medicine. Asclepius learned the art of surgery from the centaur Chiron and had the ability to raise the dead. The Rod of Asclepius is a roughhewn branch entwined with a single serpent.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Heart Block
On one of my recent call days, I cross-covered a patient with a profound cardiac dysrhythmia. The primary team had been trying to control a rapid heart rate: atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response, but had been unsuccessful for several days. Finally, they came upon a cocktail that worked: high dose long acting diltiazem, moderate dose metoprolol, and a touch of digoxin. In the clinical years, we learn that you never use two nodal blocking agents at once; that is, never put a patient on two drugs that slow the cardiac conduction through the atrio-ventricular node because it has too high risk of completely blocking the conduction through that node. Here, the patient required three separate nodal agents. She then became bradycardic with a number of different rhythms captured: a sinus bradycardia, an idioventricular rhythm, a junctional escape rhythm. But she looked stable for the time being and the team put pacing pads on her just in case.
As the on-call intern, I cross-covered the patient - meaning that I took care of her after the primary team left the hospital. I got ominous pages from the nurse and each time immediately saw the patient as I knew she was a high cardiac risk. She was always asymptomatic, but occasionally, her heart rate hovered in the high 30s. Finally, I witnessed something overwhelmingly terrifying: prolonged pauses between heart beats. If you think of the normal heart beat as 60-100 times a minute, a heart beat should go by at least every second. Here, the patient was having up to 4 second pauses before her heart would beat again, a true indication for a pacemaker.
Watching her and listening to the monitor was one of the scariest moments that call day. I could feel my heart skip as I listened for the next heart beat, worried it may never come. I started initial pharmacologic treatment: calcium gluconate to reverse the diltiazem and atropine. Finally, her eyes rolled back and she stopped responding, and we had to call a code blue and start pacing her transcutaneously. Luckily, everything was all prepared and we didn't have any problems. But it was one of the scarier codes where I was the first responder and had to determine the appropriate initial plan of action.
Image of complete heart block from Wikipedia, in the public domain.
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