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Do patients with LVAD devices have any abnormal (specific to LVAD) ECG changes? Does anyone have any examples?
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I have no experience with LVAD's and I'm kinda playing devil's advocate here, but who pays for an EMS EKG every two months? I'd be pretty surprised if that's covered by insurance.We've got a guy in our district with one. I've got some 12 leads I'll snag from the station and scan in. I remember low limb lead voltage and a ventricular abnormality. We have to to an EKG on him every 2 months and keep them on file so that we can see any subtle changes that may appear if we are called to his house.
Out of curiosity, do you guys have specific resuscitation information on file for this patient? I'm told sometimes LVAD manufacturers send instructions to medical agencies in areas their patients live.We've got a guy in our district with one. I've got some 12 leads I'll snag from the station and scan in. I remember low limb lead voltage and a ventricular abnormality. We have to to an EKG on him every 2 months and keep them on file so that we can see any subtle changes that may appear if we are called to his house.
He doesn't pay for it. We keep it on file that way we're not behind the 8 ball. If he has a follow up appointment he brings us a copy from his doctor as well.I have no experience with LVAD's and I'm kinda playing devil's advocate here, but who pays for an EMS EKG every two months? I'd be pretty surprised if that's covered by insurance.
Yes we do. When he got it the manufacturer sent a DVD with specific resuscitation guidelines as well as treatment guidelines. None of us had any experience with them so we used it as a learning experience and did a bunch of research in addition to the manufacturer literature.Out of curiosity, do you guys have specific resuscitation information on file for this patient? I'm told sometimes LVAD manufacturers send instructions to medical agencies in areas their patients live.
In some areas that's true. When I worked in Pecos TX, the first time, we had a rep come down to give us an inservice because we just had a guy move to town with one.Out of curiosity, do you guys have specific resuscitation information on file for this patient? I'm told sometimes LVAD manufacturers send instructions to medical agencies in areas their patients live.
You guys seem to have a great working relationship with this patient (and presumably the rest of the community). Glad to see the system working.He doesn't pay for it. We keep it on file that way we're not behind the 8 ball. If he has a follow up appointment he brings us a copy from his doctor as well.
Yes we do. When he got it the manufacturer sent a DVD with specific resuscitation guidelines as well as treatment guidelines. None of us had any experience with them so we used it as a learning experience and did a bunch of research in addition to the manufacturer literature.
We try. We don't have a community paramedic but with two stations and building our third we're able to reach out a bit more than some systems. We only cover 40,000 people so once that goes up hopefully we can continue doing what we're doing. I'll get those strips and a copy of the manufactures suggestions and try and get them on here soon. I'm back on shift Thursday.You guys seem to have a great working relationship with this patient (and presumably the rest of the community). Glad to see the system working.
Just curious because I had a section on LVAD today and we noted a contraindication was CPR. Which makes sense but did start a train of thought and questions.
Much appreciated.We try. We don't have a community paramedic but with two stations and building our third we're able to reach out a bit more than some systems. We only cover 40,000 people so once that goes up hopefully we can continue doing what we're doing. I'll get those strips and a copy of the manufactures suggestions and try and get them on here soon. I'm back on shift Thursday.
I flew an LVAD patient once with absolutely no electical activity. It can vary upon the patient.
With all due respect, you're wrong. We were doing an ICU to implantation center ICU transfer. Did you notice where I said I flew this patient? He had had his LVAD for many years, as they determined that a heart transplant would not happen. He had had it so long that the heart had bascially given up on pumping on it's own at all.That is not possible. The LVAD is simply an assist device.
The most important thing to understand about LVAD's is that the patient will be very knowledgeable about their device. These patients are all required to learn about their device. LVAD's are a big deal and the program is very expensive, so these patients don't just get sent home without careful instruction.
Interesting. We recently had a con ed session with reps from LVAD manufacturers and implantation centers. We were advised that chest compressions were perfectly acceptable, particularly as the alternative consequence is pretty dire.We still follow all ACLS guidelines for heart rhythms (defib, cardioversion, pacing) the only thing we can not do is compressions on the patient.
That's what I've always been told. If the LVAD is NOT running CPR is ok. The problem with CPR is it can potentially tear the connection between the LVAD and the heart itself. Or damage the device somehowInteresting. We recently had a con ed session with reps from LVAD manufacturers and implantation centers. We were advised that chest compressions were perfectly acceptable, particularly as the alternative consequence is pretty dire.