100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Advanced Concepts in Medical-Surgical Nursing: Exam II Lecture Notes Summary

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
61
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
29-01-2026
Written in
2025/2026

Advanced Concepts in Medical-Surgical Nursing: Exam II Lecture Notes Summary












Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
January 29, 2026
Number of pages
61
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

Advanced Concepts in Nursing
Lecture Notes
Exam II


Ch. 1 & 2-Basics

● Anatomy of the Heart:
○ 4 chambers
○ R side
■ Thinner walled
■ Lower pressure
■ Blood goes to pulmonary circulation then becomes oxygenated
■ Pulmonary veins to L circulation
■ Tricuspid valve between RA & RV
■ Pulmonic valve keeps blood flowing into the lungs
○ L side
■ Bicuspid (Mitral) LA & LV
■ Aortic valve keeps blood flowing up and into the aortic arch
■ Up through aortic valve
■ Out to systemic circulation
○ Deoxygenated blood comes in from periphery into the R side of heart
■ Pulm circulation
● Oxygenated
○ L side of heart
■ Out into systemic circulation
○ Coronary Arteries:
■ Circulation of the heart
■ Coronary arteries branch off the aorta**
● Oxygenated blood flows through the aorta to the system
■ R side
● R coronary
○ R side of the heart
○ Posterior part of the heart
■ L side
● L main coronary
○ Branches into L anterior descending wall
○ Circumflex coronary artery
■ For L side of the heart
● “Widow-maker” MI… blockage occurs at the top of the L main
coronary artery before it branches into the L anterior descending
and the circumflex coronary arteries
○ If it’s completely blocked, circulation to the anterior wall of
the heart is lost



DYS 1

,● Cardiac Cycle: rhythm strip
○ Each P-QRS-T sequence is one heartbeat
○ P wave:
■ Stands for atrial depolarization (contraction)
■ at the beginning of the strip
■ While atria is contracting, the ventricle is in resting mode
■ From the sinus node to the atrium
○ PR Interval: from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the R wave
■ The time it takes the electrical signal to get from the atria down to the SA
node
■ The time it takes to get to the AV junction
○ QRS: middle of the strip
■ represents ventricular systole (contraction)
■ Ventricular depolarization
■ From the AV to the ventricle (QRS complex)
○ ST Segment: the time it takes the electrical impulse to get through to start
ventricular repolarization (T wave)
■ This will give info about any cardiac ischemia or MI injury
● ST segment will be depressed in ischemia
● If injury has already occured, ST segment will be elevated above
baseline
■ Assess for abnormalities here
○ T wave: end of the strip
■ represents ventricular repolarization
■ Atria are at rest
○ U wave: late ventricular repolarization… not usually seen
■ Don't need to focus on this
○ Don't need to know all of the phases of the cardiac cycle, but need to know
what’s happening w/ each part of the cycle
○ Nomenclature:
■ Q wave: downward wave preceding an upward wave
■ R wave: any upward wave
■ S wave: downward wave following an R wave
■ QS wave: downward wave w/ no upward wave at all
○ Mechanical:
■ Diastole: relaxation phase
● rapid filling phase:AV valves open because of the pressure
gradient and ventricles rapidly fill
● Diastasis: flow into ventricles slows as pressures equalize
● Atrial Kick: atria contract, squeezing the remainder of blood into
the ventricles
○ Happens at the end of atrial contraction
■ Atrial contraction sends much of the blood though
contraction



DYS 2

, ○ Remainder of blood is squeezed into the ventricles
○ Is responsible for 10-20% of cardiac output
■ Pts w/ Afib loose this “kick”
● CO is lost in circulation
■ Systole: contraction phase
● Isovolumetric Contraction: ventricles contract but no blood is
flowing
● Ventricular Ejection: valves open, blood pours out of ventricles
● Protodiastole: blood flow slows as pressure equalizes
● Isovolumetric Relaxation: ventricles relax, valves close
■ contraction/relaxation are mechanical, stimulated by the electrical
component
■ Mechanical events are measured through pulse & BP
○ Electrical:
■ Depolarization: change in the cardiac cell’s electrical charge from
negative to positive... ultimately results in contraction of the muscle
● Accomplished by Na & K ion changing place
○ Move in and out of cells
○ Causes a wave of electrical charge to course from cell to
cell, resulting in a discharge of electricity
● Should result in heart muscle contraction
■ Repolarization: return of the cardiac cell to its electrically negative charge
● Accomplished by way of the sodium potassium pump- active
transport
● Should result in relaxation
■ Depolarization and repolarization are the electrical events that lead to the
mechanical events of contraction/relaxation
■ Refractory Periods: r/t the electrical portion
● There are areas on the electrical heart muscle that could be
stimulated again if they had a strong enough impulse
● Absolute: no amount of stimulus can cause depolarization of the
cardiac muscle again
○ At the beginning of the QRS complex to the middle ⅓ of T-
Wave
● Relative: strong stimulus can cause depolarization in the heart
○ From the first ¼ of T-wave to the last ¼
○ Depolarization in this portion can cause serious
dysrhythmias such as ventricular tachycardia
● Supernormal Period: weak stimulus can cause depolarization and
therefor contraction
○ At the tail end of the T-wave
○ Can cause severe dysrhythmias as well-ventricular tachy
● Cardiac Conduction System: pathway of specialized cells that create and conduct
electrical impulses through the heart



DYS 3

, ○ SA (sinoatrial node): where conduction starts
■ Rate is 60-100
■ P wave
■ Goes through intranodal paths that carry over to LA and to AV node
● AV (atrioventricular) node
■ Rate is 40-60
○ Bundle of his
■ Right bundle branches & Left bundle branches
● Purkinje fibers
■ Rate is 20-40
○ Results in ventricular contraction
● Heart Cells:
○ Have specific properties that allow them to perform specific functions that may
not be possible in other parts of the body
○ Automaticity: ability to create an impulse
○ Conductivity: ability to conduct an impulse to neighboring cells
○ Excitability: ability to depolarize
○ Contractility: ability to contract
● Sinus Fails:
○ AV junction escapes:
■ MI affects sinus node… tissues are dead/no longer work
■ No rhythm is ejected from sinus node
■ AV junction/node & ventricle likely still work
● Pacemaker is 40-60 here
● “Back up” pacemaker
○ Ventricle Escapes:
■ Last backup is the ventricular rate… when sinus, atrium, AV junction all
fail
■ No P wave
■ Complex is wide & abnormal
■ Rate is very slow d/t the rate being only 20-40
● EKG Paper:
○ The paper used doesn’t change regardless of the amount of leads
○ Divided into small blocks, 1 mm in height/width
○ Counting horizontally measures time (intervals)***
■ Counting 5 big /25 small boxes=1 second
■ 1 big box/5 small boxes=0.2 seconds***
■ 1 small box= 0.04 seconds***
○ Counting vertically measures amplitude
● 12 Lead EKG:
○ Don't need to know how to evaluate a 12 leak EKG
○ Putting the leads in different places affects the “view of the camera” when looking
at the heart-this is the value of an EKG
○ Pt may have 1-2 rhythm strips



DYS 4

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
JordanBrook NURSING
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
231
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
33
Documents
21366
Last sold
4 days ago

3.9

42 reviews

5
21
4
8
3
7
2
1
1
5

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions