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Electrocardiographic Monitoring (JCMC)

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Answer
rhythm strip   electrocardiogram printout  
electrocardiogram (ECG/EKG)   the graphic recording of the heart’s electrical activity. It may be displayed either on paper or on an oscilloscope  
artifact   deflection on the EKG produced by factors other than the heart’s electrical activity.  
bipolar limb leads   EKG leads applied to the arms and legs that contain two electrodes of opposing polarity; leads I, II, & III  
Einthoven’s triangle   the triangle around the heart formed by the bipolar limb leadt  
augmented limb leads   another term for unipolar limb leads, reflecting the fact that the gound lead is disconnected, which increased the amplitude of deflection of the EKG tracing  
unipolar limb leads   EKG leads applied to the arms and legs, consisting of one polarized (+) electrode and a nonpolarized reference point that is created by the EKG machine combinging two additional electrodes; also called augmented limb leads; leads aVR, aVL, and aVF.  
precordial (chest) leads   EKG leads applied to the chest in a pattern that permits a view of the horizontal plane of the heart; leads V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, and V6  
P wave   first component of the EKG; corresponds to atrial depolarization. On lead II, it’s a positive, rounded wave before the QRS complex  
QRS complex   reflects ventricular depolarization. Q wave is the first negative deflection after the P wave; the R wave is the first positive deflection after the P wave; the S wave is the first negative deflection after the R wave  


   


 

 

 

 

 

 
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