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ECG Stress Test Quiz

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
Thallium is considered a what?   Isotope  
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What is the # 1 reason for doing a EKG / ECG?   To look for evidence of coronary artery disease (To see if you have blockages in your coronary arteries.)  
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What are the three I's of myocardial infarction?   Ischemia - Injury - Infarction  
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What does ischemia mean?   Reduced blood supply  
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How accurate is a stress test with nuclear imaging and without?   With 95%; Without 80-85%  
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What are the major coronary risk factors a person not change?   Family History - Diabetes Mellitus (Type I) - Gender  
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What raises your family history risk factors?   MI or sudden death of male family before 55 or age 65 for women  
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What concerning diabetes mellitus raises your risk factor?   DM increases risk of artery damage  
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What are the risk factors related to gender?   Men > 45 years old; Women 55 years of premature menopause without estrogen replacement therpy  
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Classic EKG finding for a person with ischemia is what?   ST depression  
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Classic EKG finding for a person with injury is what?   ST elevation  
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If you see ST elevation of an EKG during a stress test, what would you do and why?   Stop the test; You are past ischemia and in the zone of injury and that is the intital stages of someone having a heart attack  
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Normal 'J' point deviation is what?   1 box (1mm) above the base line or 1/2 (.5mm) below the base line  
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If the 'J' point is 1 box or more below the base line, what is it a sign of?   Ischemia  
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What are the three kinds of angina?   Stable; - Unstable - Variant  
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Define stable angina -   'Predictable' chest pain; (Present at determined workloads)  
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Define unstable angina -   'Unpredictable' chest pain; (Present at rest)  
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Define variant angina -   Caused by coronary artery spasm (Also known as Prinzmetal's angina)  
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What does exercise stress tests evaluate?   the hearts response during physical exertion to increased oxygen demand  
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What is the value of one met?   5 mL of oxygen per kg  
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Indication - Evaluation of symptoms -   Is chest pain of cardiac origin? Other symptoms include syncope, dyspnea & palpitations  
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Indication - Detection of ischemia -   ID of low, intermediate or high risk patients; Evaluation of severity of CAD; Evaluation after MI, PTCA or CABG  
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Indication - Evaluation of dysrhythmia -   Evaluate arrhythmia; Induce arrhythmia  
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Indication - Efficacy of pharmacological therapy -   Determine which medications to use (anti-anginal, anti-hypertensive, anti-arrhythmic); Assess effects of therapy  
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Indication - Evaluation of cardiovascular functional capacity -   Measurement of maximal O2 uptake; Classification of physical fitness; Assessment for exercise training  
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What are the risks associated with exercise testing?   Risk of death during or right after an exercise test is < 0.01%; - Risk of MI during or immediately after an exercise test is < 0.04%; - The risk of a complication requiring hospitalzation (Including MIs) is approximately 0.1%  
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Define sensitivity -   Ability of a test to detect abnormality.  
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Define specificity -   Ability of a test to detect normals  
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What are the chances of a patient having an adverse effect from stress test?   1 in 1000 (This includes anything from hypertension to a heart attack)  
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What are the chances of a patient dying from a stress test?   1 in 10,000  
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What are the essential components of all emergency medical plans?   All personnel should be trained in basic CPR & ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life Support) - 2 Emergency numbers should be clearly posted; - 3 Emergency plans should be established & posted; - 4 Regular drills should be conducted quarterly for all personnel  
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What do you do for pre-test?   1 - 12-lead EKG while pt is supine (Make sure limb leads are on bone in truck area) 2 - Have pt hyperventilate  
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What are the Bruce treadmill graded exercise test protocols?   3 min stages (Every 3 mins both elevation & speed increase)  
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What are the Balke treadmill graded exercise test protocols?   1 min stages  
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How do you figure maximum heart rate?   Subtract the patients age from 220 (Ex: 50 year old pt would be 170; 220 - 50 = 170)  
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How do figure target heart rate?   Mulyply % set by doctor by maximum heart rate. (ex: 90% of 170 = 170 x .9)  
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Define sub maximal -   Anything below 80% of maximum heart rate  
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