Fluke Biomedical ProSim 6 User Manual

Page 102

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ProSim™ 6/8
Users Manual

A-8

Trigeminy

A PVC appears after every two normal QRS complexes.

Venous

(1) Of or pertaining to a vein or veins. (2) Returning to the heart through the great veins.

Ventricle

A small anatomical cavity or chamber, as of the brain or heart, especially (1) the chamber

on the left side of the heart that receives arterial blood from the left atrium and contracts

to drive it into the aorta, and (2) the chamber on the right side of the heart that receives

venous blood from the right atrium and drives it into the pulmonary artery.

Ventricular Fibrillation

An irregular ventricular waveform, coarse or fine. Coarse and fine ventricular fibrillations

occur when the electrical signals in the ventricles are chaotic, and multiple, ectopic,

ventricular pacemakers are firing erratically. There are no real P waves and no clear R-R

interval. Ventricular fibrillation waveforms are irregularly shaped. Ventricular fibrillation

is a life-threatening condition; usually in such situations a defibrillator is applied

immediately to return the heart to its normal rhythm.

Ventricular Tachycardia

A faster-than-normal rhythm of beats (160 BPM) originating in the ventricles, similar to

type-1 (left-focus) PVCs. Ventricular tachycardia is a life-threatening arrhythmia in

which one or multiple, ectopic, ventricular pacemakers in the bundle branches, Purkinje

network, or ventricular myocardium are firing in a heart beating more frequently than 110

times a minute. In some cases the heart will be beating at a rate above 240 BPM.

Ventricular tachycardia usually occurs in cases of extreme cardiac disease and often

initiates or degenerates into ventricular fibrillation. This type of tachycardia can reduce

cardiac output by as much as 25 % due, in many cases, to the lack of an atrial “kick” and

therefore the lack of a complete filling of the ventricles with blood prior to ventricle

contraction.

Volt

The International System unit of electric potential and electromotive force, equal to the

difference of electric potential between two points on a conducting wire carrying a

constant current of one ampere when the power dissipated between the points is one watt.

Waveform

(1) The mathematical representation of a wave, especially a graph of deviation at a fixed

point (baseline) versus time. (2) On an ECG tracing or output, the size, shape, and

distance (in milliseconds) of a P-QRS-T complex.

Wavelength

In a periodic wave, the distance between two points of corresponding phase in

consecutive cycles.

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