Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia

Revision as of 16:49, 25 October 2014 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)

SVT terminology can be confusing, as some references consider SVT to be any rhythm originating above the ventricles (i.e. sinus tachycardia, MAT, atrial flutter, atrial fibrillation, PSVT, etc). As these entities have their own specific articles and treatment, only paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia links here as used in normal clinical parlance."

Background

  • Also known as SVT, AV nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT), AV reentrant tachycardia (AVRT)

Diagnosis

Sx Sinus Tach SVT
Hx volume loss sudden onset
PE dehydated CHF-like
*HR <180 >180
Variability Yes No

*In infants HR cuttoff = 220

DDX

  1. WPW
  2. Lown-Ganong-Levine Syndrome‎
  3. Mitral disease
  4. Digitalis toxicity
  5. Acute MI
  6. Pericarditis
  7. Hyperthyroidism
  8. Drugs (alcohol, tobacco, caffeine)

Treatment

  1. Unstable
    1. Synchronized cardioversion 0.5-1.0 J/kg
  2. Stable
    1. Vagal maneuvers
    2. Adenosine
      1. 6mg IVP; 12mg IVP (if initial dose failed)
    3. Calcium-Channel Blockers
      1. Diltiazem 15–20mg IV over 2min
        1. May give 25mg IV if inadequate response after 15min
        2. If IV bolus worked start IV infusion at 5–20mg/hr
        3. Contraindications: Hypotension, CHF
      2. Beta-Blockers
        1. Metoprolol 5mg IV q5min x 3; give 50mg PO if IVP effective
        2. Esmolol 500mcg/kg IV over 60sec
          1. May give repeat bolus if inadequate response after 2-5min
          2. If effective start infusion at 50mcg/kg/min (titrate up to 300mcg/kg/min)

See Also

Source

  • Rosen's
  • UpToDate