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  • - Atrial fibrillation is a heart arrhythmia

  • more commonly know as AFib.

  • It's one of the supraventricular tachycardias.

  • In a normal heart, electrical wavelengths

  • are conducted from the SA node to the AB node

  • in an organized fashion.

  • And since you have organized conduction going

  • from the SA node to the AV node you're going to get

  • concentric or unified contraction of the atrial tissue.

  • However, in AFib wavelengths are in disarray.

  • So notice how they're all erratic and going everywhere.

  • Because you lose this organized signal,

  • you're not going to have unified contraction

  • of the atria, instead with these erratic wavelengths

  • you're going to have atrial spasming.

  • It actually kinds of looks like there's a bag

  • of worms in the atria and they're all moving around,

  • if you can imagine that.

  • Also the wavelengths are doing their own things,

  • so they're going to be signaling the AV node erratically

  • and this is going to lead to an irregular rhythm,

  • because of the irregular stimulation.

  • Classically the AFib EKG is said to be

  • irregularly irregular.

  • What does that mean?

  • Well notice how the distance between

  • the R-R intervals is different with each beat.

  • In a normal heart it's the evenly spaced R-R intervals.

  • With AFib you have different distances between

  • the R and the R intervals.

  • Also in AFib there are no distinct P-waves on EKG.

  • Instead you have the coarse squiggly lines running through.

  • But there are no distinct P-waves, that's because

  • remember the atria is spasming.

  • So you're not going to get that nice

  • unified concentric contraction of the atria,

  • so you have these coarse squiggly lines instead

  • representing the atrial spasm.

  • What are the risk factors for atrial fibrillation?

  • Well anyone that had diseased atrial tissue

  • has an increased risk for AFib.

  • And how does atrial tissue become diseased?

  • Well, with old age, so the skin in your body

  • tends to get old with age, so does your atrial tissue.

  • Also anything that causes the tissue of the atria

  • become inflamed can cause atrial fibrillation.

  • So imagine if you just had a recent heart procedure

  • that causes inflammation, that will increase

  • your risk for atrial fibrillation and anything

  • that causes atrial enlargement.

  • This includes years of high blood pressure

  • and also certain types of valve disease like

  • mitral stenosis, certain types of lung dissease

  • and previously having AFib can enlarge your atria.

  • Other things that increase your risk,

  • include certain hormonal abnormalities

  • specifically your thyroid hormone

  • and years of alcohol abuse.

  • It's also worth mentioning that people who have AFib

  • are at an increased risk for having strokes.

  • So these people are typically put on

  • some sort of blood thinner medication.

  • Now why are these people at a higher risk for stroke?

  • When the atria is spasming blood is going to

  • pool in the atrium.

  • When the atrial tissue is spasming,

  • blood then pools in the atria and it doesn't move.

  • And what happens to blood that doesn't move?

  • It clots.

  • Now imagine, so I'm drawing a big clot right here,

  • and imagine if this clot escaped the atrium,

  • went to the ventrical, and then out

  • to the rest of the circulation,

  • it could go to other organs, including the brain.

  • and if a clot goes to a blood vessel that supplies

  • the brain, well that can lead to stroke.

  • Therefore, people who have had AFib are usually

  • put on blood thinners which will help prevent

  • clot formation and thereby reduce the risk

  • of certain kinds of strokes.

- Atrial fibrillation is a heart arrhythmia

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B2 中高級 美國腔

心房顫動(Afib)|循環系統和疾病|NCLEX-RN|可汗學院 (Atrial fibrillation (Afib) | Circulatory System and Disease | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy)

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    alex 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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