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Assessing and Understanding ECGs: The ECG 10+ tool, 1st Edition

ISBN: 9780323880800
Εκδόσεις:
Διαστάσεις 24 × 19 cm
Μορφή

Έντυπο

Εκδόσεις

Ημ. Έκδοσης

2024/04

Συγγραφείς

,

Κύριος Συγγραφέας

44,00€(Περιλαμβάνεται ΦΠΑ 6%)

Διαθεσιμότητα: Υπό Έκδοση

Περιγραφή

This new title is ideal for clinicians working in out-of-hospital settings who need to interpret electrocardiography safely and understand when to consult a cardiologist.

The book presents a new method, ECG10+, for assessing ECGs without missing relevant pathology. The method enables readers systematically and safely to read ECGs by addressing 10 ECG findings and linking them to the clinical presentation. The book covers indications and quality of assessment, how to undertake ECGs, explanations of equipment and assessment of the various types of ECG waves.

Assessing and Understanding ECGs is ideal for GPs, nurses and other healthcare workers who may need to make or interpret ECGs, as well as residents and clinicians working in hospital settings both in and outside cardiology.

Key Features

Logical and easy to follow – written in plain language for non-cardiology clinicians

Bespoke images specially created to support understanding

Unique and visually uniform translation from the heart function to the ECG-view enables the reader to thoroughly understand the ECG

Full explanation of the electrophysiological function of the heart and related PQRST-waves as seen on the 12-lead ECG (‘from pump to paper’)

Introduction and explanation of ECG10+ – a safe and systematic method to assess ECGs quickly and thoroughly

Simple checklist to facilitate ECG interpretation in daily practice

61 case studies describe highly relevant clinical ECG-related problems in out-of-hospital situations, for practising theory and the ECG10+ method

Summaries and reference chapter provide a concise overview

Author Information
By Karen TS Konings, MD, PhD, General practitioner, specialised in cardiovascular disease; Robert TA Willemsen, General practitioner, specialized in cardiovascular disease and Guusje JM Bertholet, Medical illustrator

Περιεχόμενα

Section One (Textbook content)

Part 1 ECGs in primary care / outside the hospital setting – Indications and quality of assessment

1.1 ECGs outside the hospital setting

1.2 Patients with cardiac symptoms

1.2.1 Irregular heartbeat

1.2.2 Palpitations and tachycardia

1.2.3 Bradycardia

1.2.4 Chest pain

1.2.5 Suspected heart failure

1.2.6 A patient in the emergency room

1.2.7 ECGs in childhood

1.3 Screening in patients without complaints

1.3.1 Increased cardiovascular risk

1.3.2 Screening for atrial fibrillation

1.3.3 Screening after syncope

1.3.4 Screening upon starting QT-elongating medication

1.3.5 Pre-operative screening

1.3.6 Screening in sportspeople

1.3.7 Screening in family members of patients with sudden cardiac death

1.4 Quality of ECG assessment by non-cardiologists

1.5 Summary: indications of ECGs by non-cardiologists

Part 2 Making and understanding ECGs – basic electrophysiology and electrocardiography

2.1 Instructions for making ECGs

2.1.1 Electrodes and leads

2.1.2 Tips and tricks for high quality ECGs

2.1.3 ECG interpretation software

2.2 Explaing the ECG-waves

2.2.1 ECG-registration of heart activity

2.2.2 ECG-leads explained

2.2.3 ECG-paper: settings and definitions

2.2.4 Explaining P-, Q-, R-, S- and T-waves

Part 3 Assessing and understanding ECGs – systematic assessment using the ECG10+ method

3.1 Introduction ECG10+ checklist

3.2 ECG10+ checklist: systematics and explanation

3.2.1 ECG10+ point 1: frequency, regularity (and rhythm)

3.2.2 ECG10+ point 2: heart axis

3.2.3 ECG10+ point 3: P-wave

3.2.4 ECG10+ point 4: PQ-interval

3.2.5 ECG10+ point 5: Q-wave

3.2.5 ECG10+ point 6: QRS-complex (R-progression, height, width)

3.2.6 ECG10+ point 7: ST-interval

3.2.7 ECG10+ point 8: T-wave

3.2.8 ECG10+ point 9: QT-interval

3.2.10 ECG10+ point 10: Rhythm

3.2.11 ECG10+ point +: Diagnosis and plan

3.3 Keep it simple!

Part 4 Reference

4.1 Summary

4.2 Main illustrations in overview

Section Two Case studies: 31 cases (to be expanded to 50)

No complaints

1 Hypertension

2 Examination

3 Safely exercising

4 Sudden cardiac death in the family

5 Routine ECG

6 ‘Fun’ ECG

Slow

7 Woman of high age

8 Unwell while swimming

9 Progressive exercise intolerancy

10 Fatigue

Fast

11 Palpitaions

12 Dizziness upon bending over

13 Dyspnea upon exercise

14 Agoraphobia

15 Working 80 hours a week

16 Chest pain upon exercise

Fast-summary

Palpitations

17 Missing beats

18 Frightened

19 Heart in the throat

20 Brady-tachy

Pain

21 Blessing in disguise

22 Sick

23 Irradiating pain

24 Oppressive pain

25 112-call

26 Coronary artery disease?

Chronic

27 Heart failure

28 Unknown history

29 Progressive complaints

30 Shortness of breath and ankle edema

31 A psychiatric patient

Appendices

Abbreviations

Literature

Index