ENTC 4350 DEFIBRILLATOR PACE MAKERS DEFIBRILLATOR l The
ENTC 4350 DEFIBRILLATOR & PACE MAKERS
DEFIBRILLATOR
l The defibrillator is an electrical device that delivers a pulse of therapeutic current intended to reverse a ventricular fibrillation (VF) or a life threatening ventricular tachycardia (VT) in the heart of a patient.
l A current applied to the surface of the body in excess of 80 milliamps and less than 1 ampere such that it passes through the heart is apt to cause it to fibrillate. • The result is that the cardiac output falls to less than that required to sustain life. • This is electrocution.
l However, if the current exceeds 1 ampere, it carries enough energy to cause all of the cardiac muscle fibers to contract simultaneously and cause the heart to stop fibrillating. • The current pulse needs to be controlled very carefully. • If it is too small, it causes fibrillation, and • if it is too large, it can cause burn injuries.
DEFIBRILLATOR PRINCIPLES
l The early clinical applications of defibrillation in 1956 by P. M. Zoll used an AC current pulse to defibrillate with some success. • However, the reliability was significantly improved in 1962 when B. Lown introduced a defibrillator that delivered a short DC pulse of current to the heart through the chest wall.
l Defibrillation occurs because the strong current stimulus causes simultaneous contraction of all of the muscles in the heart. • The first region to repolarize after the pulse is the sinoatrial (SA) node. • It, therefore, regains control of the pacing of the heart.
l The effective and safe use of the defibrillator depends upon the proper diagnosis of the symptoms of sudden cardiac death (SCD) and upon quick response. • • Accurate diagnosis is crucial because the defib rillator pulse can induce fibrillation into a heart that is normally beating. The need for quick response is necessary because the probability of reversing a fibrillation with a defibrillator declines rapidly after only one minute.
l Therefore, the effectiveness of the defibrillator has been improved by making self diagnostic models available, especially to people with less medical training, such as • fire fighters, • paramedical professionals, and even • laypeople in the home of a cardiac patient.
l These people decrease the response time by their close availability to the victim of SCD who inherently has little or no warning. • In addition, implanted defibrillators are available to patients who have survived SCD and are susceptible to further attacks.
Lown Defibrillator Circuit
l An electrical circuit introduced by Lown to deliver a short, high current pulse to a patient.
l To prepare the defibrillator for external use, it is necessary to charge the capacitor up to between 1, 000 and 6, 000 volts. • This is done by putting the switch in the charge position, so that the battery voltage, stepped up to these high levels, can be applied to the capacitor.
l The capacitor consists of two pieces of metal separated by an insulating material. • If it is made to stand alone, the capacitor will hold its charge for a long time, minutes or even hours in some cases.
l That is, the capacitor stores energy, WA, which develops a voltage, V, across its metal plates. • The amount of energy in units of joules is given by • where C is the value of the capacitance measured in units of farads and V is the voltage across the capacitor.
l The energy stored in the capacitor is proportional to the square of the voltage between its plates. • The amount of energy typically stored in the capacitor of a defibrillator, so that it can be later delivered to the patient, ranges from 50 to 400 joules.
Defibrillator Pulse Voltage and Energy
l It is important for the defibrillator user to understand the voltage pulse output because its shape is an indicator of proper defibrillator operation. • Early defibrillators had an erroneous waveform and were not reliable.
l An understanding of how the energy is distributed among the human—machine interface components determines whether the patient receives the appropriate therapy or whether an injury is inflicted.
l The defibrillator pulse is generated by the basic circuit. • After the capacitor has been charged with the • switch in position 1, the defibrillator is ready to deliver a voltage pulse to the patient. This delivery is made by putting the switch in the discharge position, 2.
l A voltage waveform across the patient is developed. • • • The current is zero at the instant after the switch is thrown because the energy goes into building up a magnetic field around the inductor, L. As that magnetic field builds up, the current, and therefore the voltage, increases in the paddle and patient resistances, causing the initial rise in voltage in the waveform. After the energy stored in the capacitor becomes depleted, the current falls, causing the waveform to peak and then diminish to zero again.
l The oscillation of the energy between the capacitor and inductor after the initial pulse sometimes causes a small ripple to follow, but that should have no significant physiological effect. • The inductor and capacitor values are chosen to make a pulse to peak at about 2, 600 volts and have a duration of approximately 7 milliseconds.
l All of this energy does not get into the patient. • Some is lost in the internal resistance of the defibrillator circuit, RD and some is wasted in the paddle—skin resistance, RE.
l To calculate how much of this energy gets to the patient, resistance RT, consider the equivalent circuit. • The four resistors in this circuit are in series.
l Therefore, the current in each of them is the same. • And the energy absorbed by any one resistor is proportional to the total available energy, according to the voltage division principle. • The formula for the energy absorbed by the thorax, WT is
EXAMPLE l A defibrillator has an available energy, WA, of 200 joules (J). • If the thorax resistance is 40 ohms (W), the electrode—skin resistance of a paddle with sufficient electrode gel is 30 ohms and the internal resistance of the defibrillator is 10 ohms. • Calculate the energy delivered to the thorax of the patient.
Solution l In this case, RT = 40 ohms, RE =30 ohms, and RD = 10 ohms. The equation for the amount energy delivered yields
l The calculation shows that less than half of the available energy gets into the patient where it can defibrillate the heart. • Most of the energy is absorbed in the paddles where it is dissipated as heat in the paddle and the skin.
EXAMPLE l The defibrillator has an available energy of 200 J. The thorax resistance is 40 ohms. • The paddles are not properly covered with gel, so each paddle has an electrode—skin resistance of 200 ohms. • Calculate how much of the available energy gets into the thorax of the patient.
l Solution Here, RT = 40 ohms, RD = 10 ohms, and RE = 200 ohms. • The energy transfer equation yields
l In this case, only 17. 8 joules of energy get into the thorax of the patient. • This probably would not be enough energy to defibrillate a heart.
• Because most of the circuit resistance is in the paddle—skin interface, most of the energy would be dissipated there (in this case, 182 joules). • That energy in the paddle—skin interface would be converted to heat and could cause a skin burn.
l The consequence of not putting the proper amount of gel on the paddle is that the heart will not defibrillate and the skin will be burned. • Even if the energy setting was turned up to achieve a defibrillation of the heart, it could cost the patient an unnecessary skin burn.
l Paddle sizes range from 8 to 13 cm in diameter for adults (4. 5 cm for infants). • When the skin is properly gelled and a firm pressure is applied, the transthoracic resistance ranges from 27 to 170 ohms.
Diagnostic Defibrillator
l Ventricular fibrillation is a common initial rhythm in sudden cardiac death. • Early defibrillation is accepted as the most effective means of improving survival rates in ventricular fibrillation.
l The greatest impediment to early defibrillation is the fact that many cardiac arrests occur outside the hospital. • When communities added early prehospital defibrillation to their Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) protocols, survival rates improved. • Unfortunately, one of the major hazards in using a defibrillator is the misdiagnosis of a fibrillating heart.
l The major symptoms visible without the aid of diagnostic equipment are • A loss of consciousness, • Dilated pupils, • Lack of pulse, and • Apnea.
l These symptoms require skill and training to assess and can be misinterpreted. • If the defibrillating current is delivered to a normal heart, and if it hits during the T wave (when the heart is most vulnerable), it may cause the heart to fibrillate.
l Therefore, it is necessary to have positive evidence that the heart is fibrillating before the defibrillator is used. • This may be obtained from the EGG waveform.
l The fibrillating EGG is characterized by a lack of QRS complexes and a visible component of approximately 150 cycle oscillations.
l In an attempt to provide early defibrillation to more of the population, a large number of emergency service people, such as firemen and policemen, who are not used to treating arrhythmias have been trained in the use of the simple automatic external or diagnostic defibrillator.
l The operation of this defibrillator is best explained by beginning with the patient who is wired with four ECG leads placed in the standard position. • The EGG waveform information is processed by the EGG unit to the lower left. • The output waveform is then applied to the QRS detector and the fibrillation detector.
l If the QRS is present, a signal will be applied to the upper lead of the upper AND gate. • Then if the attendant pushes the defib switch, placing a signal on the lower lead also, the AND gate will deliver an inhibiting signal to the defibrillator pulse generator. • An AND gate generates an output signal only when stimulus is present on both the upper and the lower input terminals.
l If there is no QRS and the fibrillation detector delivers a stimulating pulse to the lower lead of the lower AND gate, then when the attendant activates the defib switch, a stimulus will be put on both terminals of that gate, and its output will trigger the defibrillator. • Thus, the defibrillator will deliver a therapeutic current pulse through the large electrodes on the sternum and apex to the patient’s chest.
Cardioverter
l When a physician diagnoses evidence of an abnormal supraventricular rhythm, such as an atrial flutter or a hemodynamically stable ventricular tachycardia, he or she may prescribe for the patient to be cardioverted. • A cardioverter delivers a defibrillating pulse to the heart synchronized on the R wave so that it does not accidentally cause ventricular fibrillation.
l Here, the leads are placed in the standard position on the chest, and the defibrillator paddles or adhesive electrodes are placed appropriately. • The EGG from the patient is amplified by the EGG unit and presented to the QRS detector.
l When the QRS is present, a signal from the output of the detector is passed through approximately 30 milliseconds of delay and then presented to the AND gate. • If the attendant is holding down the cardiovert switch, the AND gate will trigger the defibrillator pulse generator. • It then defibrillates the heart approximately 30 milliseconds after the QRS.
l This is the point in time that the heart normally depolarizes and delivering the defibrillation pulse at that time should not cause the heart to fibrillate. • The timing is important to keep the current pulse from hitting the heart during the T wave, when the ventricle may become partially depolarized and cause the heart to fibrillate.
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