NCLEX CRUSADE ACADEMY TEST - 15 EKG PRT 2
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![]() NCLEX CRUSADE ACADEMY TEST - 15 EKG PRT 2 Descripción: EKG PRT 2 |



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1. First-degree AV block is characterized by: Dropped QRS complexes. Progressive PR interval prolongation. PR interval greater than 0.20 seconds but constant. Complete atrial and ventricular dissociation. 2. Second-degree AV block Type I (Wenckebach) is identified by: Constant PR interval with dropped QRS. Progressive PR interval prolongation followed by a dropped QRS. Irregular P waves. Absence of QRS complexes. 3. Second-degree AV block Type II (Mobitz II) is characterized by: Random dropped QRS complexes without PR prolongation. Constant PR interval with occasional dropped QRS. Absence of P waves. Short PR interval. 4. Third-degree AV block (complete heart block) occurs when: PR interval shortens progressively. P waves disappear. Atria and ventricles beat independently. Only the ventricles contract. 5. The first-line medication for symptomatic bradycardia is: Adenosine. Amiodarone. Atropine. Lidocaine. 6. If atropine fails in severe bradycardia, the next intervention is often: Adenosine. Transcutaneous pacing. Defibrillation. Magnesium sulfate. 7. Atrial fibrillation is characterized by: Regular rhythm. Sawtooth pattern. Irregularly irregular rhythm. Wide QRS complexes. 8. Atrial flutter is identified by: Irregular baseline. Sawtooth flutter waves. Wide QRS complexes. Absence of P waves. 9. A major complication of atrial fibrillation is: Pulmonary edema. Stroke due to clot formation. Bradycardia. Hypokalemia. 10. Medications commonly used for rate control in atrial fibrillation include: Calcium channel blockers and beta blockers. Antibiotics. Insulin. Corticosteroids. 11. The drug of choice for SVT is: Dopamine. Adenosine. Lidocaine. Digoxin. 12. Adenosine administration typically results in: Permanent cardiac arrest. Brief asystole followed by rhythm reset. Severe tachycardia. Hypertension. 13. PVCs (Premature Ventricular Contractions) originate from: SA node. Atria. Ventricles. AV node. 14. Multifocal PVCs are considered more dangerous because: They originate from multiple ventricular sites. They occur only during sleep. They occur in atria. They always produce bradycardia. 15. The R-on-T phenomenon occurs when: A PVC occurs during ventricular repolarization. A P wave overlaps a QRS. The T wave disappears. Two QRS complexes merge. 16. Ventricular tachycardia is defined as: Rapid atrial rhythm. Rapid ventricular rhythm originating in ventricles. Slow ventricular rhythm. Irregular atrial rhythm. 17. If a patient with ventricular tachycardia has no pulse, the correct intervention is: Synchronized cardioversion. Defibrillation and CPR. Adenosine. Vagal maneuvers. 18. Torsades de Pointes is commonly treated with: Atropine. Magnesium sulfate. Adenosine. Dopamine. 19. Ventricular fibrillation results in: Low cardiac output. Zero cardiac output. Increased cardiac output. Mild hypotension. 20. The priority treatment for ventricular fibrillation is: Cardioversion. Defibrillation. Adenosine. Atropine. 21. Synchronized cardioversion differs from defibrillation because: It delivers a lower shock. It synchronizes with the R wave. It is used only during cardiac arrest. It requires CPR. 22. Defibrillation is used for: Atrial fibrillation. Stable tachycardia. Pulseless VT and ventricular fibrillation. Bradycardia. 23. After cardiac catheterization via femoral artery, the patient should: Sit upright. Walk immediately. Lie supine with leg straight. Flex the hip. 24. A key NCLEX prioritization rule when interpreting EKG is: Always treat the rhythm first. Treat the patient, not the monitor. Ignore symptoms. Always shock abnormal rhythms. 25. Before treating any rhythm abnormality the nurse must: Call the physician. Check for a pulse. Start IV fluids. Obtain consent. |




